Cabinet is where the real political power sits in a parliamentary democracy. Ministers have enormous power both individually and collectively.
Only the first minister – the prime minister or premier – gets to decide who sits at the cabinet table. That’s a power first ministers are always careful to preserve because it is the ultimate expression of their control over their caucus. People want to get to cabinet and the only way in is through the premier.
Changes in cabinet are often rumoured but until they happen, they are not real. Only the premier and her closest, most trusted advisors know what is coming. They only tell the people involved at the last possible moment. The expectation - often a clearly spoken expectation - is that the people who know will keep their mouths firmly shut.
So when CBC provincial affairs reporter David Cochrane can report that a cabinet shuffle is imminent, attributing information to multiple unnamed but apparently high-ranking Tories, you can understand that Kathy Dunderdale’s administration is in far more serious political trouble than it first appeared.
The real political division in society is between authoritarians and libertarians.
Showing posts with label messaging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label messaging. Show all posts
11 September 2012
10 August 2012
The politics of table salt #nlpoli
Tom Hedderson would probably like a do-over. Responding to an opposition call for a ban on road-side pesticide use by Hedderson’s department, the minister compared the toxicity of the chemical defoliant his people use to table salt.
And table salt was worse!
In politics, that sort of comment can be demonstrably true but it can also be one of those moments where that truth doesn’t matter as much as other truths.
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