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Here, reproduced under the fair Dealing provisions (§29) of the Copyright Act, is an editorial from today’s National Post; I considered posting this in the RCMP board but my key point relates to security/intelligence and the Privy Council Office, thus it’s in this thread, despite its age.
My emphasis added.
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/editorialsletters/story.html?id=ae7b120d-ceeb-4750-8e6d-aaff08a85212
The National Post has it right: the Chief Commissioner should be the apolitical chief of a uniformed service – just as the CDS is the chief of the Canadian Forces. There was (still is, I suppose) a strong lobby in Ottawa which was always uncomfortable with the paramilitary origins, traditions and (less and less) management of the RCMP. They may have some valid concerns but they went too far.
With all possible respect, Reid Morton is wrong. The Privy Council Office is exactly the right place, in my opinion the only place, from which to direct security/intelligence (and defence) matters. There is no doubt that the Clerk of the Privy Council has finely tuned political antennæ – as (s)he must have in order to balance the mandarins’ long term strategic goals and plans with the short term priorities of the elected government of the day. That is the nature of our Westminster style parliamentary democracy, as it has been since Robert Cecil was Queen Elizabeth I’s clerk. The management of the RCMP and CSIS can be safely left to the Deputy Minister in the Public Safety ministry – as the management of DND/CF is left to DM Ward Elcock. The business of setting goals and priorities, however, as with the goals and priorities of the CF and CSE are way too important to be left to anyone except the Prime Minister’s top official – the Clerk of the Privy Council. Reid Morton’s position is popular, I think amongst many people in the security/intelligence community but it is also destructive –t is, essentially, an attempt at empire building which failed when Morton et al were serving and ought not to succeed now.
In sum: by all means, Prime Minister: decouple the CC from the civil service - make her/him analogous to the CDS, but do not change the role of the PCO in leading all defence, security and intelligence services.
My emphasis added.
http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/editorialsletters/story.html?id=ae7b120d-ceeb-4750-8e6d-aaff08a85212
Depoliticize the RCMP
National Post
Published: Tuesday, April 03, 2007
On Sunday, Public Safety Minister Stockwell Day pledged a thorough and prompt investigation of allegations that senior ranks of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police were rife with corruption, that senior Mounties and civilian employees may have taken money from the force's pension and insurance funds and then -- because they had authority to investigate themselves -- obstructed probes into their possible misconduct.
Good. Getting to the bottom of these allegations is the least the government can do for the men and women of the RCMP who risk their lives keeping the peace in much of Canada. But if Mr. Day truly wants to tackle what is behind the possible wrongdoing, he will have to cast his net much wider. In the past two decades, our national police force has seen its independent, upright culture replaced by a bureaucratic mindset. If the minister wants to return the Mounties to what they once were, he needs to investigate everything that has gone wrong with the RCMP, not just the pension revelations.
The latest crisis stems from an Auditor-General's report, released in November, that concluded that the Mounties' pension fund was rampant with spending abuses, nepotism and money misdirected to pay for general budget items. Five RCMP officers and a whistleblower who lost her job, late last month accused senior management, including former commissioner Giuliano Zaccardelli, of corruption and of derailing at least two investigations into what happened to the money, including one criminal probe. These witnesses shocked members of the House of Commons public accounts committee by playing recordings of telephone calls in which participants describe investigations that were delayed, misdirected or stopped entirely as investigators moved toward senior uniformed and civilian executives.
Since their stunning testimony, it has come to light, for instance, that a seven-member internal audit team concluded as early as 2003 that "various activities related to pension administration would not withstand the scrutiny of the Canadian public or that of RCMP members contributing to the pension plan," and that "an improper allocation of costs might be perceived as a misappropriation or misuse of pension funds." Still, it is alleged, senior Mounties, including Mr. Zaccardelli, knew of these actions and did nothing. Or worse, they knew and attempted to cover up the truth.
But sadly the troubles extend well beyond the pension and insurance funds. The Airbus witch hunt against former prime minister Brian Mulroney, the Mayerthorpe ambush, the Adscam contributions to the Mounties' 125th anniversary celebrations, the errors that led to Maher Arar being sent to Syria and tortured, even the force's handling of the Auberge Grand-Mere scandal have all called into question its investigatory competence and its coziness with its political masters.
Since 1984, the commissioner has been a deputy minister, first in the Solicitor-General's department and most recently in Public Safety. This change was made to end the excesses of the 1960s and 1970s when an independent RCMP became obsessed with undermining the Quebec separatist movement and engaged in several questionable attempts to embarrass or disrupt its campaigns.
But making the commissioner a bureaucrat has been a cure that has proven worse than the disease. Instead of putting the force's commitment to impartial policing first, senior Mounties have often allowed themselves to become embroiled in Ottawa's internecine game-playing.
Reid Morden, the former head of the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service, recently told the Senate committee on national security and defence how this has compromised the RCMP's performance of its duties. Along with CSIS, Mr. Morden warned, the RCMP "remains too close to the political process," not just because the commissioner is now a civil servant, but also because on counter-terrorism and national security, both agencies report directly to the Privy Council Office, which is too closely aligned with the Cabinet's political operations.
Paul Palango, author of The Last Guardians: The Crisis in the RCMP, wrote last December that "the current culture of the force at every level ? can be described as inexperienced, undersupervised and largely unaccountable."
He and others -- including many retired officers who recall the force before it became a branch of the bureaucracy -- have recommended spreading the RCMP's current myriad duties among several forces. The Mounties should, for instance, cease to provide contract policing for most provinces and compel those provinces without their own provincial police force to set up their own. The special branch of the RCMP that guards Parliament Hill, diplomats and government entities should be converted into a separate Protective and Preventive Service along the lines of the U.S. Secret Service, and Fisheries and Oceans, Customs and the Canadian Border Service, among others, should police their own operations, rather than having to call in Mounties whenever an armed response or a criminal investigation is needed. According to Mr. Palango, the RCMP could then "be converted into a highly skilled FBI-type force with a clear mandate and focus, which would include a counterintelligence capability.
"Most important, the RCMP must be disconnected from the political process. The commissioner should not be a deputy minister, and the government should not be directing RCMP policies." Instead, the Commissioner should be hired by an independent, non-partisan review agency and report directly to it or to Parliament.
The pension scandal in the RCMP is serious, but the problems go well beyond whether or not someone dipped into the kitty. If Mr. Day is serious about preventing this type of crisis from recurring, he needs to change the Mountie culture, and that will require a top-down overhaul.
© National Post 2007
The National Post has it right: the Chief Commissioner should be the apolitical chief of a uniformed service – just as the CDS is the chief of the Canadian Forces. There was (still is, I suppose) a strong lobby in Ottawa which was always uncomfortable with the paramilitary origins, traditions and (less and less) management of the RCMP. They may have some valid concerns but they went too far.
With all possible respect, Reid Morton is wrong. The Privy Council Office is exactly the right place, in my opinion the only place, from which to direct security/intelligence (and defence) matters. There is no doubt that the Clerk of the Privy Council has finely tuned political antennæ – as (s)he must have in order to balance the mandarins’ long term strategic goals and plans with the short term priorities of the elected government of the day. That is the nature of our Westminster style parliamentary democracy, as it has been since Robert Cecil was Queen Elizabeth I’s clerk. The management of the RCMP and CSIS can be safely left to the Deputy Minister in the Public Safety ministry – as the management of DND/CF is left to DM Ward Elcock. The business of setting goals and priorities, however, as with the goals and priorities of the CF and CSE are way too important to be left to anyone except the Prime Minister’s top official – the Clerk of the Privy Council. Reid Morton’s position is popular, I think amongst many people in the security/intelligence community but it is also destructive –t is, essentially, an attempt at empire building which failed when Morton et al were serving and ought not to succeed now.
In sum: by all means, Prime Minister: decouple the CC from the civil service - make her/him analogous to the CDS, but do not change the role of the PCO in leading all defence, security and intelligence services.