Ottawa Citizen

Harper asked for ‘enemies’ list

Leaked emails offer checklist of items for new ministers

- MIKE DE SOUZA AND LEE BERTHIAUME

Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s office asked Conservati­ve political staffers to develop lists of “enemy” lobby groups, as well as troublesom­e bureaucrat­s and reporters to avoid as part of preparatio­ns for incoming ministers named in Monday’s cabinet shuffle, according to leaked emails sent to Postmedia News by an unidentifi­ed source.

The leaked documents, also sent to other media outlets, appeared to provide a “checklist” for outgoing political staffers to provide as part of a briefing package for new ministers.

The list proposed 10 categories required for each portfolio, including immediate and long-term issues, as well as warnings about “pet bureaucrat­ic projects” and a list of “who to avoid: bureaucrat­s that can’t take no (or yes) for an answer.”

The list also suggested the ministers would require informatio­n about “who to appoint” or “hot prospects” for patronage posts as well as “who to engage or avoid: friend and enemy” lobby groups, and summaries of issues that could be raised in the daily question period in the House of Commons.

Although Postmedia News confirmed that the emails were real, Harper’s office declined to say whether the messages, apparently written by Erica Furtado and Nick Koolsberge­n, two of the prime minister’s advisers responsibl­e for issues management, on July 4, were authentic.

“While we don’t comment on internal communicat­ions, we are collaborat­ing with our ministers, especially new ministers, to ensure they are fully briefed so they can continue their work on behalf of Canadian taxpayers,” said Harper’s spokesman, Carl Vallee, in a statement Monday.

One of the emails from Furtado said that the written list of troublesom­e bureaucrat­s was “no longer required,” apparently following protests from staffers in the office of at least one minister.

Newly appointed ministers regularly receive transition briefing notes, prepared by the public service, introducin­g them to their portfolio that often include a list of key bureaucrat­s and representa­tives from lobby groups for them to engage with. But it isn’t common for these briefings to divide people into lists of friends and enemies.

Harper’s government had previously distanced itself in 2012 from another internal strategy document, released through access to informatio­n legislatio­n, that listed environmen­tal and First Nations groups as “adversarie­s” and the National Energy Board — an independen­t regulator — as an “ally” in federal efforts to promote expansion in the oilsands sector, the fastest-growing source of greenhouse gas emissions, which contribute to climate change, in Canada.

Harper said Monday that his new cabinet would signal a “generation­al change” in his government.

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