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  • Bureaucratic relationships

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    February 26, 2008 Tuesday
    Final Edition


    Bureaucratic relationships



    Relations between the Harper government and the public service have
    been rocky in the past, but reports suggest they have hit a new low.

    Paul Tellier, who as Canada's top bureaucrat under Brian Mulroney
    knows the territory well, issued a warning last week in his current
    role as co-chair of the federal government's advisory committee on
    public service renewal. The committee is so worried about the level
    of hostility and mistrust between the federal government and public
    servants that it intends to release a separate report on the issue.

    Why should anyone outside official Ottawa care? To begin, a
    dysfunctional relationship between politicos and bureaucrats produces
    inefficiencies and waste. The dysfunction erodes the credibility of
    both parties, and feeds into public cynicism. The work of public
    servants is important and ought not to be delegitimized by cynicism.

    The Harper government is suspicious of a public service that has
    served Liberal governments for decades, and in some cases that
    suspicion is understandable. Last year, Mr. Harper was rightly
    frustrated with attempts by officials in Foreign Affairs to undermine
    his government's policy of recognizing the Armenian genocide.
    Bureaucrats are not elected representatives. The idea that elites at
    the Department of Foreign Affairs are the only ones who can make
    sensitive foreign policy decisions undermines the democratic system.

    But it goes both ways. Neither should politicians undermine
    bureaucrats by muzzling or intimidating them, as apparently has
    happened to some government scientists. During a time of minority
    governments, which are always susceptible to instability, a
    respectful relationship between politicians and the bureaucracy is
    more important than ever.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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