Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau's G7 Sherpa Says Former Conservative Government 'Suppressed' Diplomats

The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2018 02:59 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada's G7 sherpa says the previous Conservative government "suppressed" everything diplomats tried to do during its decade in power.
     
    Peter Boehm said the fact that the foreign service is now able to speak freely will help advance the feminist foreign policy of the current Trudeau Liberals.
     
     
    "I don't want to get political, but I will for a moment. So for 10 years, anything that the foreign service was doing was suppressed in our country," Boehm said Friday during a panel discussion in Ottawa hosted by the United Nations Association of Canada.
     
    The career public servant is Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's top adviser for the G7 leaders' summit he is hosting in Quebec this year, and where advancing gender equality and empowering women is a key theme.
     
    "With the current government we have an opportunity to put our best foot forward to show what it is we can do, to highlight our professionalism and I think this is happening," Boehm said.
     
    "This inspires the next generation."
     
    The panelists were discussing how to overcome barriers for women in their various diplomatic corps and Boehm said one way was to allow female diplomats to talk about their jobs publicly, so they can be role models.
     
    Boehm confirmed after the speech that his complaints of suppression referred to the 2006-2015 tenure of the former Conservative government of Stephen Harper.
     
    Others have complained that the Conservatives shackled senior public servants and foreign envoys and required them to clear almost all public communications with their political masters in Ottawa.
     
    The message control including having speeches vetted and meetings approved by Ottawa, as well as the crafting of detailed talking points for events in which Canadian diplomats participated in on foreign soil.
     
    On the day he was sworn in as prime minister, Trudeau sent Canadian diplomats a letter telling them "a new era" had dawned and that the strict message control was a thing of the past. The prime minister told them they had a critical role to play in communicating the foreign policy of their country.
     
    "Our heads of mission now are encouraged to engage on social media, to make statements on government policy and in fact to, wherever they are, engage with the media — the hard media — not just social media," Boehm said in an interview after his speech.
     
    "This is something new. My point is this gets the message out in terms of our vocation."
     
    In the context of Canada's G7 chairmanship, that also means being able to highlight the stories of female diplomats, he said.
     
    "Part of what we need to do is provide fearless policy advice and loyal implementation and we had lost the capacity," Boehm said.
     
    "Those muscles, those policy muscles had atrophied to a degree and now they're active again and on gender equality this is but an example of that."
     
    Four of Canada's six G7 allies are now represented by female envoys in Ottawa.
     
    British High Commissioner Susan le Jeune d'Allegeershecque said gender equality is at the heart of what her country is trying to accomplish internationally, including eradicating sexual violence as a weapon of war, forced marriage and female genital mutilation.
     
    She said it is important for gender issues to be "at the heart of the G7 agenda."
     
    "The battle is not won," she told the gathering. "There are forces out there that are trying to take us in the opposite direction."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mother Dead, Boy In Critical Condition After Being Struck By Car In Montreal Lot

    Mother Dead, Boy In Critical Condition After Being Struck By Car In Montreal Lot
    MONTREAL — An accident that claimed the life of a woman and left her young son in critical condition is highlighting the issue of aging seniors behind the wheel.

    Mother Dead, Boy In Critical Condition After Being Struck By Car In Montreal Lot

    Officers Cleared After Arresting Suspect In B.C. Constable John Davidson's Death

    Officers Cleared After Arresting Suspect In B.C. Constable John Davidson's Death
    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — British Columbia's police watchdog has cleared officers of wrongdoing after a man suspected of fatally shooting a constable was injured during his arrest.

    Officers Cleared After Arresting Suspect In B.C. Constable John Davidson's Death

    Ex-Mountie Alan Davidson Found Guilty In Five Indecent Assault Cases By B.C. Judge

    Ex-Mountie Alan Davidson Found Guilty In Five Indecent Assault Cases By B.C. Judge
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — A B.C. Supreme Court judge has found a former RCMP officer guilty of five counts of indecently assaulting five boys in the late 1970s and early '80s.

    Ex-Mountie Alan Davidson Found Guilty In Five Indecent Assault Cases By B.C. Judge

    B.C. Surpasses Ontario As Top Production Locale For Films, TV: Report

    B.C. Surpasses Ontario As Top Production Locale For Films, TV: Report
    VANCOUVER — A new report says British Columbia, the home of blockbuster movie shoots such as "Deadpool 2" and "Star Trek Beyond," has surpassed Ontario as Canada's top locale for film and television production for the first time.

    B.C. Surpasses Ontario As Top Production Locale For Films, TV: Report

    Halifax Politician Under Fire Again For Retweeting 'Ethno-Nationalist' White Supremacist Group

    Halifax Politician Under Fire Again For Retweeting 'Ethno-Nationalist' White Supremacist Group
    HALIFAX — A Halifax city councillor who has been criticized for making racially insensitive comments is coming under fresh scrutiny for retweeting a letter from a Canadian group some say is a white supremacist organization.

    Halifax Politician Under Fire Again For Retweeting 'Ethno-Nationalist' White Supremacist Group

    MPs High-Five In Commons Over Senate Approval Of Gender Neutral O Canada

    MPs High-Five In Commons Over Senate Approval Of Gender Neutral O Canada
    OTTAWA — A handful of Liberal MPs paying tribute to Canada's newly — if not quite official —gender-neutral national anthem have hit a sour note with the Speaker of the House of Commons.

    MPs High-Five In Commons Over Senate Approval Of Gender Neutral O Canada