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Federal Conservatives' Accountability and
Democratic Reform Record Gets An "F" For Breaking Many
Promises and Practising Politics As Usual
Four Years After Federal
Accountability Act Became Law, Dishonesty, Conflicts of
Interest, Excessive Secrecy,
Unlimited
Donations and Patronage All Still Legal
Another, Stronger
Accountability
Act Needed To Close 100 Remaining Loopholes and Flaws
Friday,
December
17,
2010
OTTAWA - Today, Democracy Watch marked the fourth anniversary
of
the passage of the federal Conservatives' so-called "Federal
Accountability
Act" (FAA) by issuing its Fourth
Good
Government
Report
Card on the FAA and related democratic
reform decisions by
the
Conservatives (To see Democracy
Watch's Report Card on the 2008 Good
Government Election Platforms for
the main federal political parties, click
here).
"The many government
scandals in 2010, and the broken promises and inaction detailed in the
Report Card, make it clear that another Accountability Act is needed to
close dozens of loopholes and clean up the federal government,"
said Duff Conacher, Coordinator of Democracy Watch.
Among many other highly questionable activities, the scandals
include: excessive secrecy about Afghan
Detainee documents; the unjustifiable shutting down of
Parliament; Cabinet ministers and MPs handing out government
cheques with Conservative Party logos on them; the Helena Guergis /
Rahim Jaffer / Patrick Glemaud affair;
the
West
Block
contracting affair; very weak enforcement of key laws by
the federal Ethics Commissioner,
Commissioner of Lobbying
and Public Sector Integrity
Commissioner; interference
in Access to Information Act
requests; leak
of pre-budget report by Conservative MP's staffer; auditing of MPs' expenses affair,
and senators'
expenses, and; frequent dishonesty by people involved in
federal politics.
As well, the federal Conservatives have failed to respond to
the recommendations in the May 2010 Oliphant Commission report on the Mulroney-Schreiber
affair, and have failed to empower
MPs as promised.
Overall, the Conservatives' FAA and other decisions have
increased
government accountability or attempted to increase accountability in 29
ways
(with the possibility that Cabinet could implement one final FAA
measure by establishing the Public Appointments Commission to help
ensure an end to patronage and cronyism in Cabinet appointments --
NOTE: the Conservatives promised for the third time in spring
2009 to establish the Commission) -- To
see a summary of the measures in the FAA, click here.
However, the Conservatives have also weakened government
accountability in eight ways, and failed to keep 29 promises (To
see an October 2007 summary of 24 of the 29 broken promises, click here -- the five other
broken
promises are the fixed-election-date
promise,
the
failure to hold free
votes on most issues as promised, the appointment by Prime Minister
Harper of Conservative election candidates, and the appointment of
Senators and the most recent Supreme Court Justice (To see details, click here)).
In 2006, when the FAA was being reviewed by Parliament, the
Conservatives rejected 25 changes that would have strengthened the laws
covered by the FAA that were proposed by the House committee and by the Liberal-controlled Senate.
As well, the Conservatives have ignored in
total 100
loopholes and flaws in the federal government's accountability system (To
see a summary of the 100 loopholes, click here -- To see
an
op-ed about how these loopholes would allow Karlheinz Schreiber and
former
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney to do today all the wrongdoing they are
alleged
to have done in the past, click here
-- To see a news release
listing the key ethics loopholes, click
here).
As a result, the Report Card gives the Conservatives an
overall "F"
grade because they have only partially increased accountability in the
federal
government while taking steps backwards. If the Conservatives had
kept all of their 2006
election promises, they
would have received an overall "B-" grade (as their promises covered
about
two-thirds of the loopholes and undemocratic flaws in the government's
accountability and decision-making system).
"The federal government's accountability enforcement system
is
the scandal because, among many other highly questionable activities,
it is
still effectively legal for a person like Karlheinz Schreiber to
fundraise for and make secret donations to nomination race and party
leadership candidates, to lobby in secret, to make secret, fixed deals
with Cabinet ministers,
their staff, handpicked Cabinet patronage appointees and government
employees,
and for everyone involved to be dishonest about their secret, unethical
relationships,"
said Duff Conacher, Coordinator of Democracy Watch. (To see
details
about how lobbyists are effectively allowed to work for, and to
fundraise
for, federal politicians and parties, click
here)
"Incredibly, it is much more likely Canadians will be
caught and
punished for parking illegally than a politician will be caught and
punished taking money from a lobbyist," said Conacher. "Hopefully, all federal political parties
will soon make the changes needed to closing
dozens of the loopholes that allow for unethical, secretive and
undemocratic federal political activities."
Other highly questionable activities that are still
effectively legal
include the following (To see a summary of many of the highly
questionable activities in Canadian federal politics in the past 15
years, click here):
- governments are still not required to consult with the
public in a
meaningful way even when making important, society-changing decisions;
- there are still no effective checks on the power of
Cabinet ministers
to appoint party supporters to law enforcement positions such as judges
and the heads of watchdog agencies, boards, commissions and tribunals;
- Cabinet ministers, their staff, and senior government
employees are
still allowed to be
involved in policy-making processes that affect
their
own personal financial interests;
- large gifts worth up to $10,000 to politicians are still
effectively
legal because of lack of auditing of politicians' financial statements
(and
scientific studies have shown that even small gifts have influence (For
more
details about gifts and the science of influence, click here);
- many politicians, their staff, and senior government
employees are
still allowed to become
lobbyists too soon after they leave their
government positions;
- many people who blow-the-whistle on government wrongdoing
are still
not effectively protected
from retaliation;
- MPs can switch parties between elections in return for a
promotion;
- the voting system does not ensure that each candidate has
the overall
support of a majority of voters in their riding to be elected, and;
- the federal Senate is still unaccountable in every way.
The Report Card grades the Conservatives' FAA and related decisions and
actions in 14 areas divided into five categories, as follows (with
grades
for each category):
- Honest, Ethical Government Measures - E-
(because the
Conservatives removed the
rule requiring Cabinet ministers, their staff
and
senior government officials to "act with honesty" and have used
dishonest "spin" in many of their communications, and because the FAA
did
not close huge loopholes
that allow the same people to take part in
decisions
in which they have a private interest, and did not significantly
strengthen
enforcement or penalties for unethical activities);
- Open Government Measures - E- (because the
Conservatives broke almost
all of their promises to strengthen the Access
to
Information
Act, have used the Privacy
Act to hide the identity of
public servants who have done wrong, only partially implemented their
promised
changes to federal lobbying
disclosure rules, and have ignored other secret lobbying loopholes);
- Efficient Government Measures - B (because
the Conservatives have kept most of their spending accountability
promises, but have still
left some key loopholes open (include failing to ensure the
independence
and full budget of the Parliamentary Budget Officer and Procurement
Ombudsman));
- Representative, Citizen-Driven Government Measures
- E-
(because the Conservatives have not consulted meaningfully or held free
votes
on many issues, have broken their promise to establish a Public
Appointments
Commission to ensure merit-based Cabinet appointments, broke their own
fix-election-date law by calling a snap election in September 2008,
have
introduced Senate
reform measures but resisted reasonable changes proposed by premiers
and
opposition parties, appointed 18 Senators, appointed a Supreme Court
Justice before the promised parliamentary review, and have not
kept all of their promises to ensure fair
nomination races and elections);
- General Government Accountability Measures - E
(because the Conservatives have cut
funding to citizen advocacy groups, broke some of their whistleblower
protection promises, have attacked
several officers of Parliament and government agencies without
justification, and while they have created the more
independent
Director of Public Prosecutions, they have launched only some
long-overdue
inquiries into past wrongdoing)
"By making only half their promised government accountability
changes, calling an election in violation of fixed-election-date rules,
cutting key
ethics rules, increasing government secrecy, and ignoring dozens of
huge loopholes,
the federal Conservatives have failed to live up to their pledge to
clean
up the federal government," said Duff Conacher, Coordinator of
Democracy
Watch. "All federal parties must work together to pass another,
stronger
Accountability Act as soon as possible to give Canadians the honest,
ethical,
open, representative and waste-preventing government they deserve."
Democracy Watch and its Government Ethics Coalition, Money in
Politics Coalition and Open Government Coalition, which involve more
than 50 citizen groups from across Canada with a total membership of
3.5 million Canadians, will continue pushing for these key,
democratizing changes.
- 30 -
For more information, contact:
Duff Conacher, Coordinator of Democracy Watch
Tel: 613-241-5179
Fourth
Report
Card
on
the
Loophole-Filled
"Federal
Accountability
Act"
December 4, 2007
article
about Federal Accountability Act
Democracy Watch's Clean
Up
the System webpage
To see an article about these and other Conservatives' other
broken 2006 election promises, click
here
top
Fourth Good Government Report Card on the Loophole-Filled
"Federal
Accountability
Act"
On December 12, 2006, the federal Conservatives' so-called
"Federal Accountability Act" (FAA) became law containing 30 of the
Conservatives'
52 promised measures. At the time, 15 of the 30 measures in the
FAA
still needed Cabinet approval before they would be in force and, as of
December
16, 2009, one of the 30 measures has still not been implemented (the
establishment
of the Public Appointments Commission to help end patronage and
cronyism in
Cabinet appointments).
In addition, the Conservatives made 5 other democratic reform
promises,
for a total of 57 government accountability and democratic reform
promises.
To see Democracy Watch's First Report Card,
issued
in December 2007, click here.
To
see
Democracy
Watch's
Second
Report
Card,
issued December 2008, click
here. To see the Third
Report Card, click here.
Set out below are the details about: what the Conservatives
promised to included in the FAA and other promised measures; what they
included or
failed to include; what FAA measures have been implemented; what FAA
measures
are still not in force, and; what loopholes and flaws still exist in
the federal
government's accountability system. Grades are given in each
area,
based on the following grading scale:
GRADING SYSTEM
A - Implemented promised measure(s) fully closing loophole(s)
B - Implemented most of promised measure(s) closing most of loophole(s)
C - Implemented half of promised measure(s) closing half of loophole(s)
D - Implemented part of promised measure(s) closing part of loophole(s)
E - Has taken steps toward implementing promised measure(s) but broken
many promises
F - Failed to include promised measure in FAA
I - Failed to include measure in FAA
Summary of Categories and Areas Graded and Grades
Overall Conservatives' rhetoric:
"People who work hard, pay their taxes, and play by the rules
want accountability from their political leaders. We don’t expect
politicians
to be perfect. But we do want to know that our tax dollars -- money
we’ve
worked for -- are being spent properly and wisely. Above all, we want
and
expect our dollars to be spent legally. We’ve been let
down.
The Liberal Party’s 12 years in power have featured one scandal after
another.
And despite Paul Martin’s promises to clean up Ottawa, the scandals
just
keep happening. Justice Gomery was right when he talked about the
“culture
of entitlement” within the Liberal Party. This culture of waste,
mismanagement,
and corruption cannot reform itself. The first piece of
legislation
to be introduced by a Conservative government will be the Federal
Accountability
Act, a sweeping plan to clean up government."
(p. 8 of the Conservatives' 2006 election platform document)
“the results are clear . . . the government is clean . . .”
Conservative government's Speech from the Throne (October 16, 2007)
NOTE: In his November 4, 2005 speech, then-Opposition Party Leader
Stephen
Harper stated that an "Federal Accountability Act" (FAA) containing the
52
measures he listed that day was needed to “begin the process of
fixing
the system . . . to clean up government.” However, the FAA
introduced
by the Conservatives in April 2006 only contained 30 measures (six of
which
have still not yet been implemented) and weakened ethics rules for
Cabinet
ministers, their staff, Cabinet appointees and senior government
officials
(see below for details). As a result, by the Conservatives' own
standard,
it is impossible for the government to be clean.
I. Honest, Ethical Government Measures
SECTION I OVERALL GRADE
E-
1. Requiring
honesty-in-politics
- F
- Conservatives' rhetoric: "Enshrine the Conflict of
Interest
Code into law." (p. 12 of 2006 Conservative election platform document)
- Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
The FAA
enshrined Prime Minister Stephen Harper's February 2006 version of the Conflict
of
Interest
and
Post-Employment
Code
for
Public
Office
Holders
into
a new law called the
Conflict of Interest Act (which became law July 9, 2007)
- Promised measures not included in FAA: The Conflict
of
Interest
Act does not include the former Code's subsection
3(1)
rule that requires the Cabinet ministers, their staff, Cabinet
appointees
and senior government officials to "act with honesty" ••• and the
Conservatives have used dishonest "spin" in their party communications
several times
- Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Still need to pass a law that requires all federal Cabinet ministers,
MPs, Senators, political staff, Cabinet appointees and government
employees (including
at Crown corporations, agencies, boards, commissions, courts and
tribunals)
nomination race and election candidates to tell the truth, with an
easily
accessible complaint process to a fully independent watchdog agency
that is
fully empowered to investigate and penalize anyone who lies ••• and
require
resignation and a by-election in most cases of an MP switching parties
between
elections. (Go to Honesty in
Politics Campaign
for details about Democracy Watch's proposals)
2. Strengthening
ethics
standards
for
politicians,
political
staff,
Cabinet
appointees
and
government employees, and ethics enforcement - E
Conservatives' rhetoric: "In 1993, Paul Martin
and
the Liberals promised the appointment of an independent Ethics
Commissioner. For over ten years, Paul Martin and the Liberals failed
to fulfill that
promise, and Martin voted against his own Red Book words in the House
of
Commons. Finally, under the pressure of the sponsorship scandal,
the
Liberals partially fulfilled their promise. But many problems remain
with
the role of the Ethics Commissioner, including the special exemptions
Paul
Martin created for his own business dealings."
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
kept to "Ensure that all Officers of Parliament are appointed through
consultation with all parties in the House of Commons" ••• Promise
partially kept to
"Give the Ethics Commissioner the power to fine violators" (maximum
fine
is a ridiculously low $500, and only applies to some violations) •••
Promise partially kept to "Enshrine the
Conflict
of Interest Code into law" (the FAA enshrined Prime Minister Stephen
Harper's
February 2006 version of the Conflict
of Interest and Post-Employment Code for Public Office Holders
into
a new law called the
Conflict of Interest Act (which became law July 9, 2007)) but
the Act
does not contain the key Code rules that require upholding “the
highest
ethical standards so that public confidence and trust in the integrity,
objectivity
and impartiality of government are conserved and enhanced” (subsection
3(1)
of the Code); avoiding "apparent conflicts of interest"
(subsection
3(1) of the Code); including avoiding "being placed or the
appearance
of being placed under an obligation to any person or organization that
might
profit from special consideration on the part of the public office
holder”
(subsection 22(1) of the Code) ••• Promise partially kept to
"End 'venetian
blind' trusts that allow ministers to remain informed about their
business
interests, and require all ministerial assets to be placed in truly
blind
trusts" (under the FAA, some ministerial assets are not required to be
placed
in truly blind trusts)
Promised measures not included in FAA:
Promise broken to "Close the loopholes that allow ministers to vote on
matters
connected with their business interests" not included in FAA (ministers
are
still allowed to vote on any matter that is of general application or
that
affects a broad class of people), even if they have a private interest
in
it (including a financial or business interest), because of the
definitions
of "private interest" and "conflict of interest" in the
Conflict of Interest Act (which became law July 9, 2007)) •••
Promise broken to "Allow members of the public - not just politicians -
to make complaints to the Ethics Commissioner" (the FAA requires the
Ethics Commissioner to
investigate complaints filed by politicians, but still gives the
Commissioner
the right to refuse to investigate complaints filed by the public) •••
Promise
broken to "Make part-time or non-remunerated ministerial advisers
subject
to the Ethics Code" (the FAA increases the number of part-timers and
unpaid
advisers not covered by most of the ethics rules)
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Close the loopholes in the existing ethics rules set out in the above
two sections (and apply them and the following measures to all
government institutions (including all Crown corporations) ••• selling
major assets that are in
any way likely to cause conflicts of interest (a process known as
"divestment") must be required by all public officials when they enter
office ••• Cabinet ministers, their staff, senior public servants and
MPs can easily hide large
gifts they receive from lobbyists or others trying to influence them
because
they only have to disclose assets worth $10,000 or more every 4 months
to
the Ethics Commissioner (disclosure should be required for assets worth
$1,000
or more, with updates on changes required within 30 days) ••• gifts of
any
kind worth more than $200 combined total annually to anyone in the
federal
government from anyone except relatives must be banned (and gifts of
any kind
worth more than $200 combined total annually from relatives must be
disclosed
to the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner -- NOTE: the
proposed
new Conflict of Interest Act allows unlimited gifts from
"friends")
••• as proposed by the federal Department of Finance (For details, click here), and the United Nations
Convention
Against Corruption, place anyone with decision-making power on the
anti-corruption
watch list of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre of
Canada
(Fintrac) so deposits to their bank accounts can be tracked •••
strengthen
the independence and effectiveness of all the newly created politician
and
government employee ethics watchdog positions (the Ethics Commissioner
for
Cabinet and MPs, the Senate Ethics Officer for senators, the Public
Service
Integrity Officer for government employees, the Registrar of Lobbyists
for
lobbyists) by giving opposition party leaders a veto over appointees,
and
having Parliament (as opposed to Cabinet) approve their annual budgets
(as
is currently the process for the Ethics Commissioner) ••• prohibit the
watchdogs
from giving secret advice ••• require them to investigate all
complaints
(including anonymous complaints) ••• fully empower them to penalize
rule-breakers
with high financial penalties ••• change all the codes they enforce
into
laws ••• ensure that all their decisions can be reviewed by the
courts.
(Go to Government Ethics Campaign
for
details about Democracy Watch's proposals)
3. Making the
political donations system democratic - D-
Conservatives' rhetoric: "Under the Liberals,
money and influence have played far too large a role in Canadian
politics.
During the sponsorship inquiry, Canadians learned of envelopes full of
cash
being used to fund Liberal Party campaigns, and of money from
government contracts
being funnelled back to the Liberals. The “pay to play” years in
Liberal
Ottawa must come to an end." (p. 8 of the Conservatives' 2006 election
platform
document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promises
partially kept to "Limit individual donations to parties or candidates
to
a maximum of $1,000" and to "Ban cash donations to political parties or
candidates of more than $20" (the FAA requires donations of money,
property or services worth more than $200 to parties (more than $500 to
election candidates)
to be disclosed, and limits donations to parties or candidates to
$1,100
annually, but secret, unlimited donations to nomination race and party
leadership
race candidates are still legal (as long as the donations are not used
for
their campaign)) ••• Promise mostly kept to "Prohibit all corporate,
union,
and organization donations to political parties, ridings, and
candidates"
(donations of hours of services by volunteers on leave from working at
corporations,
unions and other organizations are not limited, and are not required to
be
tracked and disclosed, making it very easy to give employees paid time
off
to "volunteer" for parties or candidates ••• Promise fully kept kept to
"Extend
to ten years the period for which Elections Act violations can
be investigated
and prosecuted."
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Require disclosure of all donations as noted in the above section
(including the identity of the donor's employer (as in the U.S.) and/
or major affiliations) and loans quarterly and before any election day
(to close the loophole that
currently allows secret, unlimited donations of money, property and
services
to nomination race and election candidates) ••• limit loans to the same
levels
as donations ••• limit spending on campaigns for the leadership of
political
parties ••• lower the public funding of political parties from $1.75
per vote
received to $0.75 per vote received (to ensure that in order to prosper
parties
need to have active, ongoing support of a broad base of individuals)
•••
and ensure riding associations receive a fair share of this funding •••
give
the Commissioner of Elections and the Chief Electoral Officer more
investigative
powers, especially the power to audit the finances and assets of
political
parties, riding associations, and candidates in nomination races and
elections,
and require them to conduct annual audits (Go to Money in Politics Campaign for
details about
Democracy Watch's proposals)
4. Closing down
the revolving door - D-
Conservatives' rhetoric: “If there are MPs
in this room who want to use public office for their own benefit, or if
there
are Hill staffers who dream of making it rich by trying to lobby a
future
Conservative government -- if that’s true of any of you, then you
better make
other plans or leave.” Stephen Harper, introducing the “Federal
Accountability
Act” pledge (November 4, 2005)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
- Promise
partially kept to "Extend to five years the period during which former
ministers, ministerial staffers, and senior public servants cannot
lobby government" (p.8) -- NOTE: the measures in Prime Minister Stephen
Harper's February
2006 version of the Conflict
of Interest and Post-Employment Code for Public Office Holders
(which
are still in effect) allowed Ministers to exempt any of their staff
from the
five-year ban until July 2, 2008, when the new Lobbying Act was
finally
implemented -- under the new Act, ministerial staff are allowed
to
apply to the proposed new Commissioner of Lobbying for an exemption
from the
five-year ban
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Prohibit lobbyists from working for government departments or serving
in
senior positions for political parties or candidates for public office
(as
in New Mexico and Maryland), and from having business connections with
anyone
who does ••• ban MPs, their staff, and government employees for one to
three
years (depending on their decision-making power in government) from
becoming
a lobbyist or working with corporations or organizations with which
they had
direct dealings while in government ••• anyone participating in the
"employment
exchange program" (who are mainly people from large corporations) is
exempt
under the FAA from the 5-year ban on senior public office holders
becoming
lobbyists -- this huge loophole in the ban must be eliminated •••
lobbyists
must be banned from becoming members of Cabinet for at least four years
after
they are elected as a federal politician (Go to Government Ethics Campaign for
details about
Democracy Watch's proposals)
top
Top
of
Report
Card
II. Open Government Measures
SECTION II OVERALL GRADE
E-
5. Strengthening
access-to-information
system
- E-
Conservatives' rhetoric: "The Liberal government
has consistently rejected attempts to provide Canadians with better
access
to government information. The present Information Commissioner has
gone to
court several times to force the government to open its windows." (p.
12
of the Conservatives' 2006 election platform document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
fully kept to "Ensure that all Officers of Parliament [including the
Information Commissioner] are appointed through consultation with all
parties in the
House of Commons and confirmed through a secret ballot of all Members
of
Parliament, not just named by the Prime Minister" ••• Promise fully
kept
to "Ensure that all government public opinion research is automatically
published
within six months of the completion of the project, and prohibit
verbal-only
reports" ••• Promise partially kept to "Expand the coverage of the [Access
to
Information
Act] to all Crown corporations, Officers of
Parliament,
foundations, and organizations that spend taxpayers’ money or perform
public
functions" (the FAA added only 50 new federal government institutions
to
the list of institutions covered by the Act, and also changed the
Act
to allow draft reports to be kept secret until finalized (delaying
access
significantly)
Promised measures not included in FAA: Promises
broken to:
"Implement the Information Commissioner’s recommendations for reform of
the
Access to Information Act." ••• to "Give the Information Commissioner
the
power to order the release of information." ••• to "Subject the
exclusion
of Cabinet confidences to review by the Information Commissioner."
•••
to "Oblige public officials to create the records necessary to document
their
actions and decisions." ••• to "Provide a general public interest
override
for all exemptions, so that the public interest is put before the
secrecy
of the government. ••• to "Ensure that all exemptions from the
disclosure
of government information are justified only on the basis of the harm
or injury
that would result from disclosure, not blanket exemption rules." •••
and
to "Ensure that the disclosure requirements of the Access to
Information
Act cannot be circumvented by secrecy provisions in other federal
acts,
while respecting the confidentiality of national security and the
privacy
of personal information."
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Strengthen the federal Access to Information Act and government
information
management system in the ways set out in the above section and by:
applying
the law to all government/publicly funded institutions ••• creating a
public
interest override of all access exemptions ••• having Parliament (as
opposed
to Cabinet) approve the Information Commissioner's annual budgets (as
is currently
the process for the federal Ethics Commissioner) ••• giving the federal
Information
Commissioner the power to order the release of documents (as in
Ontario,
Alberta and B.C.), to order changes to government institutions'
information
systems, and to penalize violators of access laws, regulations,
policies
and rules ••• eliminating the $5 fee for filing a request for a record
(given
that it is an unnecessary and unjustifiable barrier to access to
information,
and that processing the payment of the fee results in administrative
costs
for the federal government that exceed the fee) ••• increasing the
current
five-hour free records search time to 10 hours (given the lack of
efficient,
accessible information management systems in many government
institutions)
••• and; setting one fee for copying records for all government
institutions
at a level no higher than the actual copying costs, and to require
institutions to waive the copying costs if they will cause financial
hardship to the
requester ••• change the Privacy Act
to require disclosure of the identity of public servants who have done
wrong (Go to Open Government
Campaign
for details about Democracy Watch's proposals)
6. Exposing all
behind-closed-door communications - E-
Conservatives' rhetoric: n/a
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
partially kept to require disclosure of communications between
lobbyists
and ministers or senior government officials (NOTE: the new Lobbying
Act
requires only those people who are required to
register
as lobbyists to disclose some of their communications with ministers
and
senior government officials (as defined by regulations)
Promised measures not included in FAA: "Require
ministers
and senior government officials to record their contacts with
lobbyists."
(p.8)
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Require that Ministers and senior public officials to disclose their
contacts with all lobbyists, whether paid or volunteer lobbyists.
(Go to Government Ethics Campaign
for details about
Democracy Watch's proposals)
7. Strengthening
lobbying
disclosure
and
ethics,
and
the
enforcement
system - E-
Conservatives' rhetoric: "Under the Liberals,
lobbying government -- often by friends and associates of Paul Martin
and other
Liberal ministers -- has become a multi-million dollar industry.
Senior
Liberals move freely back and forth between elected and non-elected
government
posts and the world of lobbying. Liberal lobbyists have accepted
success
or contingency fee arrangements where they don’t get paid unless they
deliver
the policy change their clients want." (p. 8 of the Conservatives' 2006
election
platform document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promises
kept (finally in July 2008 with proclamation of new Lobbying Act) to "Ban success or
contingency fee arrangements" ••• "Make the
Registrar
of Lobbyists an independent Officer of Parliament" ••• to "Give the
Registrar of Lobbyists the mandate and resources to investigate
violations" ••• and to "Extend to ten years the period during which
violations can be investigated and prosecuted."
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Strengthen the Lobbyists Registration Act and Lobbyists'
Code of
Conduct disclosure and regulation system by: closing the loophole
that
currently allows corporations to hide the number of people involved in
lobbying
activities ••• by requiring lobbyists to disclose their past work with
any
Canadian or foreign government, political party or candidate ••• and to
disclose
all their government relations activities (whether paid or volunteer)
involving
gathering inside information or trying to influence policy-makers (as
in the
U.S.) ••• and to disclose the amount they spend on lobbying campaigns
(as
in 33 U.S. states) ••• strengthen the ethics and enforcement system by
adding
specific rules and closing loopholes in the Lobbyists' Code and
making
it part of the Act ••• giving opposition party leaders
a
veto over the appointment of the Commissioner of Lobbying ••• by having
Parliament (as
opposed
to Cabinet) approve the Commissioner's annual budget (as is currently
the
process
for the Ethics Commissioner) ••• by prohibiting the Commissioner from
giving
secret advice ••• by ensuring that the Commissioner must investigate
all
complaints
(including anonymous complaints) ••• by fully empowering the
Commissioner
to
penalize rule-breakers ••• and by ensuring all Commissioner decisions
can
be
reviewed by the courts. (Go to Government
Ethics
Campaign for details about Democracy Watch's proposals)
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III. Efficient Government Measures
SECTION III OVERALL GRADE
B
8. Strengthening
spending
rules,
and
powers
of
Auditor
General/other
enforcement
bodies
- B
Conservatives' rhetoric: "The Liberal government
commissions some $25 million per year in polling and public opinion
research.
Much of this polling is conducted by Liberal-connected polling firms.
The
Auditor General revealed that Paul Martin’s Finance department
commissioned
polling for which there were “only verbal reports” ? nothing was
written down
so there was no paper trail. Yet the Martin government prevented the
Gomery
Commission from investigating this part of the Auditor General’s
report."
••• "Under the Liberal government, abuse of the government contracting
process
has become commonplace. Former Liberal cabinet minister Art Eggleton,
for
example, awarded an untendered contract to a former girlfriend. He was
later
appointed to the Senate by Paul Martin." ••• "In the spring of 2004,
the Liberal
government told Canadians that the 2003-04 surplus would only be $1.9
billion.
In fact, it was $9.1 billion. In 2004-05, the Liberals spent
about
$9 billion at the end of the year to reduce their surplus to only $1.6
billion.
Just this year, the 2005 Budget estimated the 2005-06 surplus at $4
billion,
a number no reputable economic forecaster accepted. In the
economic
update only nine months later, this estimate had ballooned to $13.4
billion.
Governments cannot be held to account if Parliament does not know the
accurate
state of public finances." ••• "Over the past decade, the Auditor
General
has repeatedly blown the whistle on Liberal corruption. From the $250
million
sponsorship program, to the scandalous waste and mismanagement of the
$1
billion HRDC grants boondoggle, to the ineffective $2 billion gun
registry,
nearly every audit turns up more examples of Liberal mismanagement."
(all
from pages 10-11 of the Conservatives' 2006 election platform document)
•••
"The sponsorship scandal first came to light in an internal audit -- an
audit
which the Liberals initially tried to cover up. Under the Liberals, the
lines
between ministers and non-partisan civil servants have been blurred,
and
clear lines of accountability need to be re-established." (p. 9 of the
Conservatives'
2006 election platform document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
fully kept to "Ensure that all Officers of Parliament are appointed
through
consultation with all parties in the House of Commons" ••• Promise
half-way
kept to "Ensure that an independent review is conducted of government
public
opinion research practices discussed in Chapter 5 of the Auditor
General’s
November 2003 report to determine whether further action, such as a
judicial
inquiry, is required" (the review was completed by a handpicked
person
who did not have full independence, and it recommended that no inquiry
be held) ••• Promises mostly kept to: "Open up
the bidding
process for government advertising and public opinion contracts to
prevent
insider firms from monopolizing government business" ••• to "Review and
amend
all contracting rules to make the government’s procurement process free
from
political interference" (a new Code
of
Conduct
for
Procurement came into force September 19, 2007) •••
to
"Appoint a Procurement Auditor to ensure that all procurements are fair
and
transparent, and to address complaints from vendors" (the new Procurement
Ombudsman was established September 19, 2007 to review complaints
about violations of the Code of Conduct for Procurement) ••• and to
"Permit smaller vendors and vendors outside of the National Capital
Region to receive due consideration for government contracts" ••• Promises
mostly
kept
to:
"Create an independent Parliamentary Budget Authority to provide
objective analysis directly to Parliament about the state of the
nation’s finances
and trends in the national economy" (the Parliamentary Budget Officer
(PBO) is
a staff person of the Library of Parliament, and can be fired at any
time for
any reason, and the PBO has not received its promised full budget) •••
to "Require government
departments
and agencies to provide accurate, timely information to the
Parliamentary
Budget Authority to ensure it has the information it needs to provide
accurate
analyses to Parliament" ••• and to "Ensure that government fiscal
forecasts
are updated quarterly and that they provide complete data for both
revenue
and spending forecasts" ••• Promises mostly kept to: "Ask the
Auditor
General to conduct, on an expedited basis, an audit of all federal
grant,
contribution, and contracting policies, and will commit to following
her recommendations
••• to "Increase funding for the Office of the Auditor General to
ensure
she has the necessary resources to conduct a complete audit of grant
and
contribution programs and of any such departments, agencies, and Crown
corporations
as she deems necessary" ••• to "Allow the Auditor General to “follow
the
money” to end recipients by providing her with the statutory authority
to
conduct audits of the records, documents, and accounts of any
individual,
institution, or company that receives grants, contributions, or
transfers
under an agreement with the Government of Canada" ••• to "Ensure that
all
granting programs are reviewed every five years" ••• Promises
mostly kept
to: "Strengthen enforcement of government financial guidelines, and
introduce
new Criminal Code penalties for fraud involving the misuse of
taxpayers’
money" ••• Promises kept to: "Give the Comptroller General the
overall
authority for the internal audit function in each government
department"
to "Designate the deputy minister of each government department or
agency
as the Accounting Officer for that department. The deputy will be
responsible
to Parliament for the departmental spending and administrative
practices
of his or her department ••• and to "Require that, in the event of a
disagreement
between a minister and deputy minister on a matter of administration,
the
minister must provide written instruction to the deputy minister and
notify
the Auditor General and Comptroller General of the disagreement" ••• Promise
partially
kept
to ""Protect the integrity of the CPP
investment fund to stop politicians from raiding it to balance the
budget
or pay for other political projects." ••• Promise partially kept to
"Increase the power of Parliament and parliamentary committees to
review the
spending estimates of departments and hold ministers to account." •••
the
federal Conservatives have also handed out billions in sole-source
contracts
for military hardware (which the Auditor General is currently auditing)
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
as Justice Gomery recommended, any “special reserve” funds must be
required to be under the control of Treasury Board and covered by an
annual, public report ••• The exemptions in the the Financial
Administration Act
and its regulations that essentially allow for sole-source contracts
whenever the government wants must be closed ••• Everyone in the
government must
be required to submit the actual, detailed receipt (showing the number
of
people at the event, what was purchased, by whom, and at what price)
for
all expenses claimed to help prevent unjustified expense claims •••
Increase
the independence of the Auditor General by: requiring approval of
appointment
from opposition party leaders ••• increase auditing resources of the
Auditor
General and having Parliament (as opposed to Cabinet) approve the
Auditor
General's annual budget (as is currently the process for the federal
Ethics
Commissioner) ••• and; empower the Auditor General to audit all
government
institutions ••• to preview and prohibit government advertising that
promotes
the ruling party, especially leading up to an election (similar to the
restrictions
in Ontario, Manitoba and Saskatchewan) ••• to audit the expense reports
of
everyone in the government to help prevent dishonest expense claims •••
to
make orders for changes to government institutions' spending systems
••• and
to penalize violators of federal Treasury Board spending rules or
Auditor
General orders ••• Crown corporations must be required in the Financial
Administration
Act to apply to court to have the court void any
contract
signed with a director of the corporation or an entity in which a
director
has an interest if it is discovered that the director did not disclose
their
interest to the corporation's board of directors (NOTE: currently,
section
118 only allows the corporation to apply to court, but does not require
the
corporation to apply to court) (Go to Voter Rights Campaign for details
about
Democracy Watch's proposals)
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IV. Representative, Citizen-Driven Government
Measures
SECTION IV OVERALL GRADE
E+
9. Increasing
meaningful
public
consultation
- E-
Conservatives' rhetoric: According to all reports,
the federal Conservatives have completely ignored the Canadian
Federal
Government's
Accord
with
Citizen
Groups
(the
so-called
"Voluntary
Sector") and Codes of Good Practice in Policy Dialogue and
Funding.
Also, the Conservatives launched a highly questionable public
consultation on democratic reforms in March 2007 -- To see a Democracy
Watch news release analyzing the consultation, click here -- To
see
an article about the consultation results, click here
Promised measures implemented fully or partially: Promise
kept to "Appoint a Seniors Council comprised of seniors and
representatives
of seniors’ organizations to advise the minister responsible for
seniors
on issues of national importance" ••• Promise
not
kept
to "Hold a truly
free
vote on the definition of marriage in the next session of
Parliament.
If the resolution is passed, the government will introduce legislation
to
restore the traditional definition of marriage while respecting
existing
same-sex marriages" ••• Promise
partially kept to "Make all votes in
Parliament,
except the budget and main estimates, “free votes” for ordinary Members
of
Parliament" ••• Promise partially
kept to "Increase the power of
Parliament
and parliamentary committees to review the spending estimates of
departments
and hold ministers to account." ••• Promise
not
kept
to "Place
international
treaties before Parliament for ratification."
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Pass a law requiring all government departments and institutions to use
consultation
processes that provide meaningful opportunities for citizen
participation,
especially concerning decisions that affect the lives of all
Canadians.
(Go to Voter Rights Campaign for
details
about Democracy Watch's proposals)
10. Restricting
power
of
Cabinet
to
make
appointments
- E-
Conservatives' rhetoric: "The Liberals have
repeatedly appointed insiders, in some cases completely unqualified, to
important
public offices. Liberal candidates and MPs have received appointments
as heads
of Crown corporations, board members, and ambassadors. Liberal
staffers,
including some of those responsible for the sponsorship program, have
worked
their way into key positions in thepublic service." (p. 9 of the
Conservatives'
2006 election platform document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
fully kept to "Ensure that all Officers of Parliament are appointed
through
consultation with all parties in the House of Commons" ••• Promise
mostly
kept to "Prevent ministerial aides and other political appointees
receiving
favoured treatment when applying for public service positions" •••
Promise
broken so far to "Establish a Public Appointments Commission to set
merit-based
requirements for appointments to government boards, commissions, and
agencies,
to ensure that competitions for posts are widely publicized and fairly
conducted" (the FAA states that the federal Cabinet "may" establish the
Commission,
and Prime Minister Stephen Harper has taken no steps to establish the
Commission since a parliamentary committee rejected his handpicked
patronage nominee for Chair of the Commission in April 2006, and the
federal Cabinet has appointed
many Conservatives to key positions -- NOTE: in its October 2008
election platform, the Conservatives again promised to establish the
Commission) ••• Conservative Prime Minister
Stephen
Harper has made key decisions, and continues to be involved, in setting
the
terms of reference for a public inquiry into the Mulroney-Schreiber
affair,
and in choosing the inquiry commissioner
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability
system: Require approval by opposition party leaders for the
approximately
3,000 judicial, agency, board, commission and tribunal appointments
currently
made by the Prime Minister (including the board and President of the
CBC),
especially for appointees to senior and law enforcement positions,
after
a merit-based nomination process ••• and Change the federal Inquiries
Act to allow a majority of party leaders to launch an inquiry and
to
require approval by a majority of party leaders for setting the terms
of
reference for an inquiry, and for the selection of an inquiry
commissioner
or commission, and also to allow citizens to initiate an inquiry
through
a petition containing signatures from at least 10% of Canadians
(Go
to Voter Rights Campaign for
details
about Democracy Watch's proposals)
11. Making the
Senate
democratic or abolishing it - D
Conservatives' rhetoric: "Canada is a
democracy,
yet our democratic system has not kept pace with the needs of a
changing society.
Paul Martin used to talk about a democratic deficit, but his actions as
Prime
Minister have deepened it. A new Conservative government will be
committed
to significant democratic reform of our Parliamentary and electoral
institutions."
(p. 44 of the Conservatives' 2006 election platform document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promises
kept half-way to "Begin reform of the Senate by creating a national
process for choosing elected Senators from each province and territory"
••• and
to "Propose further reforms to make the Senate an effective,
independent,
and democratically elected body that equitably represents all regions."
(the
Conservatives have introduced bills, which have not passed, to set term
limits
for senators and to elect senators, and continue their efforts (which
continue
to face legitimate barriers (ie. questions about the constitutionality
of
the bills) and illegitimate bariers (ie. undue delays in responses by
provincial
governments and senators)) ••• appointed senators in violation of
promise not to do so until reforms were implemented ••• appointed
Supreme Court Justice before promised parliamentary review was completed
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Attempt to reach an agreement with provincial governments (as required
by
the Constitution) to either abolish the Senate or reform the Senate
(with
a safeguard that Senate powers will not be increased unless senators
are elected
and their overall accountability increased). (Go to Voter Rights Campaign for details
about
Democracy Watch's proposals)
12. Ensuring
free, fair and representative elections - D
Conservatives' rhetoric: "Canada is a democracy,
yet our democratic system has not kept pace with the needs of a
changing society.
Paul Martin used to talk about a democratic deficit, but his actions as
Prime
Minister have deepened it. A new Conservative government will be
committed
to significant democratic reform of our Parliamentary and electoral
institutions."
(p. 44 of the Conservatives' 2006 election platform document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
fully kept to give Electoral Officer the power to select returning
officers
for elections ••• Promise partially kept (because the Prime Minister
called
an election in September 2008 before a non-confidence vote had occurred
in
the House of Commons) to "Introduce legislation modeled on the BC and
Ontario
laws requiring fixed election dates every four years, except when a
government
loses the confidence of the House (in which case an election would be
held
immediately, and the subsequent election would follow four years
later)" •••
Promise partially kept to "Restore representation by population for
Ontario,
British Columbia, and Alberta in the House of Commons while protecting
the
seat counts of smaller provinces" (the bill introduced by the
Conservatives
restores representation by population for B.C. and Alberta, but not
Ontario)
Promised measures not included in FAA: Promises
broken to
"Ensure that party nomination and leadership races are conducted in a
fair,
transparent, and democratic manner" ••• and to "Prevent party leaders
from
appointing candidates without the democratic consent of local electoral
district
associations."
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Change the current voting law and system in the ways promised by the
Conservatives set out in the above section, and also as follows: so
that nomination and party leadership races are regulated by Elections
Canada (including limiting spending on campaigns for party leadership)
••• so that Elections Canada
determines which parties can participate in election debates based upon
merit
criteria ••• so that voters are allowed to refuse their ballot (ie.
vote
for "none of the above", as in Ontario) ••• to provide a more equal
number
of voters in every riding ••• and to provide a more accurate
representation
in Parliament of the actual voter support for each political party
while
ensuring that all elected officials are supported by, and are
accountable
to, a majority of voters in a specific constituency (and with a
safeguard
to ensure that a party with low-level, narrow-base support does not
have
a disproportionately high level of power in Parliament) ••• require the
media
to give equal prominence to all numbers in survey result reports, to
end
the misleading hype of polls seen in the past few federal
elections
(Go to Voter Rights Campaign for
details
about Democracy Watch's proposals)
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V. General Government Accountability Measures
SECTION V OVERALL GRADE
E+
13. Facilitating
citizen
watchdog
groups
over
government
- I
Conservatives' rhetoric: n/a
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
n/a
Promised measures not included in FAA: n/a
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Require federal government institutions to enclose one-page pamphlets
periodically in their mailings to citizens inviting citizens to join
citizen-funded and
directed groups to represent citizen interests in policy-making and
enforcement
processes of key government departments (for example, on ethics,
spending,
and health care) as has been proposed in the U.S. and recommended for
Canadian
banks and other financial institutions in 1998 by a federal task force,
a
House of Commons Committee, and a Senate Committee. (Go to Citizen Association Campaign for
details about
Democracy Watch's proposals)
14. Ensuring
effective whistleblower protection - D
Conservatives' rhetoric: "There have been many
examples over the years of reprisals against government whistleblowers,
including
public servants who helped reveal the sponsorship scandal, and others
who
exposed waste and abuse in the Department of Foreign Affairs.
After
pressure from the opposition and whistleblowers themselves, the
Liberals brought
forward weak legislation to deal with the issue. Much more still
needs
to be done." (p. 10 of the Conservatives' 2006 election platform
document)
Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promise
mostly kept to "Give the Public Service Integrity Commissioner the
power
to enforce compliance with the Public Servants Disclosure Protection
Act"
(in fact, the FAA gives a new Tribunal the power to enforce the Act)
•••
Promise partially kept to "Ensure that all Canadians who report
government
wrongdoing are protected, not just public servants" (in fact, not even
all
public servants are protected) ••• Promise partially kept to "Remove
the
government’s ability to exempt Crown corporations and other bodies from
the
Act" (in fact, the government has chosen not to have some bodies (e.g.
CSIS)
covered by the Act) ••• Promise partially kept to "Require the prompt
public
disclosure of information revealed by whistleblowers, except where
national
security or the security of individuals is affected" (in fact, some
information
will likely never be disclosed) ••• Promise partially kept to "Ensure
that
whistleblowers have access to the courts and that they are provided
with
adequate legal counsel" (in fact, whistleblowers have to first go to a
new
Tribunal, and in most cases will only be provided with $1,500 maximum
for
legal counsel costs)
Promised measures not included in FAA:
Promise broken
to "Establish monetary rewards for whistleblowers who expose wrongdoing
or
save taxpayers dollars"
Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Require everyone to report any violation of any law, regulation,
policy,
code, guideline or rule ••• and give all watchdog agencies over
government
(for example: Auditor General, Information Commissioner, Privacy
Commissioner, Public Service Commission, the four ethics watchdogs,
Security and Intelligence Review Committee, the National Health
Council) full powers to investigate allegations of violations, to
penalize violators, to protect anyone who
reports a violation (so-called "whistleblowers") from retaliation, to
reward
whistleblowers whose allegations are proven to be true, and to ensure a
right
to appeal to the courts. (Go to Government
Ethics
Campaign for details about Democracy Watch's proposals)
15. Ensuring
loophole
free laws and strong penalties for wrongdoers - C
- Conservatives' rhetoric: "To ensure prosecutorial
independence, a Conservative government will follow the path of several
provinces, including Nova Scotia and British Columbia, and other
parliamentary democracies such as the United Kingdom and Australia and
establish an independent Office
of the Director of Public Prosecutions." (p. 13 of the Conservatives'
2006
election platform document)
- Promised measures implemented fully or partially:
Promises
mostly kept to "Create the Office of the Director of Public
Prosecutions,
with the responsibility to conduct prosecutions under federal
jurisdiction" ••• to "Give the Director of Public Prosecutions the
power to make binding and final decisions to prosecute or not unless
the Attorney General or Deputy
Attorney General instructs the Director to do otherwise by means of
public
written notice" ••• to "Appoint the Director of Public Prosecutions
from among
qualified candidates recommended by a committee which will include
representatives
of the opposition parties in Parliament" ••• "Give the Director of
Public
Prosecutions the mandate to review recent decisions on prosecutions in
the
sponsorship scandal and other matters which have been the subject of
investigation
by the Auditor General and the Ethics Counsellor or Commissioner" •••
and
to "Structure the Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions in
accordance
with best practices in other jurisdictions such as British Columbia,
Nova
Scotia, Australia, and the United Kingdom" ••• Promise kept to
"Establish,
at the earliest possible time, a comprehensive, independent judicial
inquiry
into the investigation of the Air India bombing of June 23, 1985."
- Promised measures not included in FAA: Promise
broken to ""Ensure that regional development agencies are depoliticized
and fully accountable to Parliament and Canadians."
- Loopholes/flaws still in federal government's
accountability system:
Close any technical and other loopholes that have been identified in
laws, regulations, policies, codes, guidelines and rules (especially
those regulating government institutions and large corporations) to
help ensure strong enforcement, and increase financial penalties for
violations to a level that significantly effects the annual
revenues/budget of the institution or corporation.
(Go to Voter Rights Campaign for
details about Democracy Watch's proposals)
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