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|    Message 89,712 of 90,757    |
|    an evil man to All    |
|    Harper's ugly legacy to Canadian taxpaye    |
|    24 Nov 15 16:30:45    |
      From: brewnoser2@gmail.com              'The evil that men do lives after them . . . '              These appointments were made to tie Trudeau's hands - and to protect the       tarsands operations of Alberta.              Pork-barrel abuse at its worst. Harper should be removed as an MP and put up       on charges of abuse of office. With Duffy.       __________________________________________________       ipolitics| Nov 23, 2015              Doomed Harper government made 49 "future" patronage appointments              Former Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's cabinet quietly stacked       government agencies and Crown corporations with dozens of "future       appointments," and early appointment renewals in the dying days of its regime,       many of which were only scheduled        to go into effect long after the Conservatives were defeated, iPolitics has       learned.              While some had been due to come up for renewal in November and December,       others were renewed up to a year in advance of when they had been scheduled to       expire and made effective the date the appointees' current term was due to end.              For example, Mark O'Neill's term as director of the Canadian Museum of History       wasn't scheduled to expire until June 2016. Last June, Harper's cabinet       renewed his $212,700 to $250,200 a year job for five years, effective June       2016.              John Badowski's appointment as chairman of the Transportation Appeal Tribunal       was renewed July 28. The renewal takes effect Jan. 1, 2019, and runs until       July 29, 2020. The position currently pays between $174,700 and $205,500.              A review by iPolitics of order in council appointments by the Harper       government found 49 appointments were made in recent months but scheduled to       only take effect after the Oct. 19 election. Of the 49 appointments, 15 went       into effect between election        day and November 22. Six take effect today.              Another 28 are slated to go into effect between November 26 and January 2019.               View full list below. <<=====              Of the 49 future appointments and early renewals, 29 were adopted in a single       day - June 18, 2015. The earliest dates to November 2014 when National Farm       Products Council member Michael Pickard's mandate was renewed for three years,       effective April        2016.              The move by Harper's government constrains Liberal Prime Minister Justin       Trudeau's ability to put his government's stamp on some key agencies like the       National Energy Board, which regulates things like the construction of       pipelines and the import of        crude oil and natural gas.              For example, National Energy Board member Lyne Mercier was due to be renewed       in December. Instead, Harper's government renewed the appointment for seven       years last June, effective in December. In July, Keith Chaulk was appointed       to the National        Energy Board for seven years, effective Nov. 23. Both are scheduled to       remain on the board until 2022. ((+_+))       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^              Jacques Gauthier, a temporary member of the National Energy Board, was renewed       in April, well before his mandated to expire in December. He is now to sit       until 2018. Another temporary member, Michael Richmond, was renewed for       three years last April,        effective Nov. 1, the day his term was set to expire.              The moves mean that barring the future appointments or early renewals being       rescinded, the Trudeau government will not be able to replace any temporary       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       members of the National Energy Board until at least May 2018 and any permanent       members of the NEB until January 2020 - which is after the next election.              Many of the future appointments could be hard to undo without risking       litigation. Of the 49 early renewals and future appointments, 24 are       conditional on "good behaviour," meaning appointees can only be stripped of       their positions for bad conduct.              Another 20 appointments, however, were made "during pleasure" meaning the       government can terminate the appointment for little or no reason.              One reappointment, of honourary consul Ricardo Guimaraes, which takes effect       in December, can be cancelled by either side on 60 days notice. Four       appointments do not spell out the terms of the appointment.              While some governor in council appointments are full time jobs with six figure       salaries, others may be part time jobs paid per diems of a few hundred dollars       each time they attend a meeting.              Governments appointments in the dying days of an administration has at times       been controversial.              In the 1984 election campaign, former Conservative Leader Brian Mulroney       politically eviscerated former Liberal Prime Minister John Turner for making       dozens of appointments that went into effect just before he called the       election. The controversy over        the appointments contributed to Mulroney winning the election in a landslide.              Liberal Senator Percy Downe, who handled appointments for three years for       former Prime Minister Jean Chrétien before then becoming his chief of staff,       says making appointments that run into the next government's mandate is       "unbelievable" and        unprecedented.              "The longstanding tradition has been that a current government can't bind a       future government....You don't make appointments that are two years ahead of       time on the eve of an election."              Downe said reappointments would normally only be done two or three months       ahead of time and was surprised to learn that some reappointments done by       Harper's cabinet only take effect more than a year later.              "That's way in advance. That's unbelievable."              Downe is particularly concerned by the Harper government's move to block the       Trudeau government from making any appointments to the National Energy Board       for several years.              "I have never heard of the like of that ever - that's amazing, that's a big       story. Particularly with the National Energy Board they were trying to tie the       hands of the future government which is not fair game at all."              Downe said he believes the government can cancel the appointments, if it       desires, even the ones that were made subject to good behaviour.              "The bad conduct may simply be the way it was done. It's unprecedented to do       appointments years ahead of time."              Cory Hann, spokesman for interim Conservative Leader Rona Ambrose, said it       will be up to the Liberal government to decide what to do.              "It will be up to the current government to determine if it wishes to overturn       any appointments or re-appointments made by the previous government."              Officials from the prime minister's office have not yet responded to questions       from iPolitics.              See what we're going to pay for:              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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