Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Bob Rae may get his reward as an ambassador

- TRISTIN HOPPER

As Liberals across the country swigged champagne and gave triumphant speeches to screaming crowds, Bob Rae was hunkered down with the old-timers at a TV studio.

Just like Brian Mulroney and Joe Clark, the ex-Liberal leader was spending Election Night as a pundit, filling the airtime between real news.

“The last thing the leader wants is to have people going on television, campaignin­g for some job or other,” said Rae when asked if he might suddenly have a gig with any apparent Liberal government.

“I don’t need a title and I don’t need a job, the leader knows that I’m on his team and I’m happy to help him in any way he wants.”

Of course, it was the boilerplat­e statement of humility for an ex-politician who insiders agree is almost guaranteed a role in a new government made possible in part by Rae’s time as interim leader after Michael Ignatieff ’s historic loss.

“You could do a lot worse than Bob Rae,” said John McKay who, along with the former Ontario premier, was one of the 34 Liberal MPs who survived the thrashing of 2011.

As far back as 2010, when Rae was Liberal foreign affairs critic, there was an Ottawa rumour that the Tories were planning to put Bob Rae in Tel Aviv.

Rae, however, quickly put down the rumour as an example of dirty politics. “It’s not hard to see the underlying narrative: ‘The only reason Rae is doing what he is doing on Afghanista­n is because he’s getting a job from Harper,’” he said at the time.

The Israel job may be open again as the Liberals bring their own approach to the government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

And already, the new government is searching for a new ambassador to the United States. Incumbent Gary Doer picked the Liberal election victory as just the time to announce his longrumour­ed departure.

An Ambassador Rae, say insiders, might have just enough progressiv­e charm to convince a U.S. President Barack Obama or a future president Hillary Clinton to get a pipeline or two approved.

He has the blessing of Frank McKenna, the former New Brunswick premier who served as U.S. envoy during Paul Martin’s government.

“The breadth of his public service and ‘diplomatic’ assignment­s against a host of intractabl­e problems is a matter of record and, quite frankly, unmatched,” wrote McKenna, now deputy chairman of the Toronto-Dominion Bank, in an email to the National Post.

The high commission­er of Canada to the U.K. is also expected to soon be opening up. Since the 1960s, nobody has served in the role longer than five years, and the current high commission­er, former B.C. premier Gordon Campbell, has been in London since 2011.

“Preferably, from my point of view, he would be ambassador to the UN because he has experience dealing with internatio­nal issues,” said former B.C. premier Ujjal Dosanjh.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/The Canadian Press ?? Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, right, walks with Bob Rae following a press conference on Parliament Hill in 2013 at
which Rae announced his resignatio­n from the House.
SEAN KILPATRICK/The Canadian Press Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, right, walks with Bob Rae following a press conference on Parliament Hill in 2013 at which Rae announced his resignatio­n from the House.

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