The thing that has most characterized Mark Carney鈥檚 short career in politics is speed.
It鈥檚 easy to overlook the fact that he won鈥檛 have completed four full months as an active politician until Friday of this week. It was, amazingly, only on Jan. 16 of this year that he went to a hockey rink in Edmonton and announced he was a candidate to lead the federal Liberal party.
Seventeen weeks later he鈥檚 won that leadership, formed Cabinet No. 1, called and won an election campaign听补苍诲 on Tuesday named Cabinet No. 2.
Another prime minister might be tempted to slow down for a moment and take a breath. Or at least to dial down expectations a touch. But Carney seems determined to keep up the frenetic pace.
He made a point of noting that his new cabinet was being sworn in faster following an election than any previous one. And that Parliament will resume quicker than it鈥檚 ever done after a vote 鈥 on May 26.
鈥淲e鈥檙e starting as we aim to go on,鈥 he said, adding his government will act 鈥渨ith urgency and determination.鈥 Cabinet No. 2, he said, is 鈥渟maller and more focused鈥 than the previous one (i.e. Justin Trudeau鈥檚, not his own makeshift Cabinet No. 1).
Of course, that鈥檚 all relative. , including the PM himself, plus 10 junior secretaries of state, for a ministry of 39. It took just shy of two hours to have them all sworn in.
That may well be small-ish compared to recent bloated cabinets, but it鈥檚 still a lot more than is actually needed to run the country. The United States, 10 times bigger, has a federal cabinet of 21. Germany has 17, plus the federal chancellor. The U.K. has 22, plus another five junior ministers. Australia has 23 and France just 17. There must be a comparable country with a national cabinet bigger than Canada鈥檚, but it doesn鈥檛 spring readily to mind.
Of course, that鈥檚 because our federal cabinet isn鈥檛 only chosen to run the government. You could do that with maybe a dozen powerful ministers, but then you wouldn鈥檛 be able to accomplish all the other things the cabinet/ministry is expected to do in our system 鈥 assure representation from every corner of the country; make sure various ethnic communities feel 鈥渉eard鈥; find spots for Indigenous people (four in this ministry); get the language balance right; and of course these days make sure there鈥檚 gender balance or awfully close to it.
Carney also had another balancing act to do: finding the right tradeoff between experienced (i.e. Trudeau-era) ministers and newcomers, including those who ran for the first time under his banner. He split that right down the middle, with 14 holdovers and 14 new faces in the core cabinet.
It鈥檚 easy to second-guess some of those choices. But Carney avoided the obvious pitfalls. He kept Steven Guilbeault well away from any environmental/economic file and dumped Jonathan Wilkinson entirely, throwing a bone to Alberta and the West. Two new ministers 鈥 and 鈥 will now head the energy and environment departments. Carney kept Chrystia Freeland away from Canada-U.S. issues, given Donald Trump鈥檚 active hate on her. And he had M茅lanie Joly and Anita Anand swap jobs (Industry and Foreign Affairs), probably a win-win all round.
For the rest, it will all be in whether this group can rise to Carney鈥檚 promise 鈥 and challenge to his ministers 鈥 to act with 鈥渦rgency and determination.鈥 The Trudeau government, especially as time wore on and became increasingly worn down, became notorious for 鈥渁nnouncement-itis鈥 鈥 the tendency to confuse the announcement of a policy with the policy itself. Once the press release went out and the dollars were earmarked, they too often failed to follow up and make sure things got done.
Carney has promised quite different policies than Trudeau鈥檚. He鈥檚 stolen the Conservatives鈥 clothes in many areas and pledges to deliver more 鈥渕anageable鈥 immigration levels, faster homebuilding, a more energetic campaign against crime, a new relationship with the United States and nothing less than the 鈥渂iggest transformation鈥 of the national economy since the Second World War.
That鈥檚 a very tall order, but even more challenging is the new PM鈥檚 pledge to deliver on all those promises and with all due speed. That鈥檚 the bar he鈥檚 set for his government and it鈥檚 the measure by which he should be judged.
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