Toronto Star

Fame or misfortune part of the game

- Martin Regg Cohn Martin Regg Cohn’s Ontario politics column appears Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday. mcohn@thestar.ca, Twitter: @reggcohn

It is a tale of two teams, from two different eras. And a morality play about the ethical perils of politics.

One branch of Dalton McGuinty’s old political squad is riding high, with two former staff now running the Prime Minister’s Office from Ottawa’s stately Langevin Block — and another ex-aide representi­ng our country at the sumptuous Canadian embassy in Washington.

By contrast, the relief squad that ran the former premier’s office in his final days has hit bottom — with two top staffers facing possible imprisonme­nt if convicted on charges of criminal misconduct laid last month.

Their contrastin­g fates offer a cautionary tale about the opportunit­ies and opportunit­y costs of politics — the risks and rewards that await former staff in their political afterlife. The PMO announced Saturday that our new ambassador to the U.S. is David MacNaughto­n, a principal secretary to McGuinty from 2003 to 2005 who later built a successful consulting business at Strategy Corp.

His prestigiou­s appointmen­t was shepherded by Gerald Butts — a one-time protégé of MacNaughto­n who succeeded him as principal secretary to Ontario’s premier in 2005, and now holds the same title with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Also overseeing the ambassador­ial posting: Trudeau’s new chief of staff, Katie Telford, who worked with Butts on education issues in McGuinty’s heyday a decade ago.

All three of them were key players in the Liberals’ 2015 federal campaign, chaired by Telford, with Butts playing policy guru, and MacNaughto­n acting as Ontario cochair. Together, they vaulted the Liberals from third to first place in a discipline­d and profession­al campaign.

The U.S. ambassador­ship is a prize that many had once thought McGuinty himself might be in line for. But the former premier’s star long ago went up in smoke over those gas-fired power plants that erupted in scandal.

That enduring controvers­y has blighted the careers not just of McGuinty, but two loyalists who stuck with him during his final days in the premier’s office: His last chief of staff, David Livingston, and his deputy chief, Laura Miller.

After a lengthy OPP probe, Livingston, 63, and Miller, 36, were charged with breach of trust, mischief in relation to data, and misuse of a computer system in connection with deleted hard drives suspected of being tied to the controvers­ial and costly cancellati­on of those gas-fired power plants.

They are scheduled to appear in court next Wednesday and face up to 10 years in prison if convicted. Both have denied any wrongdoing.

Regardless of the final verdict, their careers have been devastated. After being charged, Miller quit her job as executive director of the B.C. Liberal Party and Livingston quietly gave up his work as a senior adviser at a prestigiou­s law firm as the investigat­ion proceeded.

And while McGuinty himself was not part of the OPP investigat­ion, he has flitted in and out of low-profile jobs, his career beyond politics not rising to the level of other former premiers. It is an unexpected epilogue to a politician who was once celebrated as the most successful Liberal premier in living memory.

Despite the fact his top advisers from way back now occupy the most important positions in the country, McGuinty no longer has their ear as he once did. And those two key advisers from his final years are now fighting to prove their innocence in court hearings.

Only a judge or jury can decide whether their alleged transgress­ions rise to the level of criminalit­y, or merely questionab­le political judgment. But the damage to their reputation­s, and to McGuinty’s own legacy, cannot easily be undone.

Fairly or unfairly, politics is always about winners and losers. The contrastin­g fortunes of McGuinty and his former top staff — all smart people working in the same office — are a reminder to all politicos, from all parties, as they wield power.

Their influence can be fleeting, their status ephemeral. Whether their fate is to be rewarded or reviled depends not just on their actions — or whose team they’re on — but upon forces that sometimes spin out of control.

That’s politics.

 ?? COLIN MCCONNELL/TORONTO STAR ?? The U.S. ambassador­ship was a prize many had thought Dalton McGuinty might be in line for. But the former premier’s star dimmed long ago over the gas-fired power plants that erupted in scandal, Martin Regg Cohn writes.
COLIN MCCONNELL/TORONTO STAR The U.S. ambassador­ship was a prize many had thought Dalton McGuinty might be in line for. But the former premier’s star dimmed long ago over the gas-fired power plants that erupted in scandal, Martin Regg Cohn writes.
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