Public-relations tweaks won’t fix the big, costly policy mistakes Carney refuses to touch (Western Standard)
Reality, as British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher used to observe, is not optional. She was a determined politician — they didn't call her 'The Iron Lady' for nothing (and she remains, I believe, a political totem to Premier Danielle Smith.) But even the most resolute leader, armed with a thick skin and an army of communications staff, eventually bumps into ... reality.
When they do, lofty rhetoric tends to give way to something more achievable.
Is that what's happening with Prime Minister Mark Carney, who arrived in office in April promising to be Justin Trudeau with better math skills? Certainly, he has been announcing a series of what the Ottawa press corps call “policy recalibrations” — a polite way of saying he’s backing away from some of his loftier aspirations.
At least, such is the appearance ...
CLICK HERE for the full story
When they do, lofty rhetoric tends to give way to something more achievable.
Is that what's happening with Prime Minister Mark Carney, who arrived in office in April promising to be Justin Trudeau with better math skills? Certainly, he has been announcing a series of what the Ottawa press corps call “policy recalibrations” — a polite way of saying he’s backing away from some of his loftier aspirations.
At least, such is the appearance ...
CLICK HERE for the full story

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