Paul Davis started out as Premier talking about his plan to run a national competition to find a communications director for his office.
There’s been no mention of Davis’ missing communications director as he and his office blunder through the Manning mess. Then suddenly, on Monday, the talk of a national competition was gone. Davis appointed one of the departmental communications directors to the job. Davis also announced a bit of old news, namely that he’d hired Peter Morris from the university to handle something called “strategic communications” in his office and Donna Ivey to handle the media inquiries.
Whatever Morris has been doing, clearly it had nothing to do with strategic communications. The political disaster doing business as unelected cabinet minister Judy Manning has been proof of that. What you’ve probably got there, as much as anything else, is the current fashion to label everything as “strategic” even when it isn’t.
Davis’ new communications director is Heather MacLean. if she wants to make any big changes, MacLean’s got a tough job ahead of her. After all, Davis and his crowd have been ploughing ahead without much sign that they want to change anything. Inertia is the biggest political enemy the Conservatives have but the Conservatives just like the sameness of it all.
Some of you may recall that Davis was the leadership candidate most committed to keeping things pretty much as they are. It’s not surprising, then, that when time came to find a director, Davis found one who has been with the Conservatives since the beginning.
That communications news wasn’t the only shift on Monday.