Time to revive Team Canada trade missions

The TCM model of connecting with other countries is perfectly made for turbulent times so I personally hope that Mark Carney buys in. If he does, then I would encourage him to speak with Jean Chrétien, so that he can hear directly from the original TCM captain.
Public opinion is the real opposition

This fall will be about proof. For all the talk of a fresh start, Canadians have grown skeptical that any government can deliver on the big promises.
From mandates to momentum

There is a path forward, but it will demand political capital expenditure and hard choices.
‘The honeymoon period will be over’: politicos expect high bar for Carney’s first budget, and omnibus-bill headaches

The prime minister faces the task of balancing the government’s operating budget, while also spending more in key areas such as national defence and infrastructure projects, says David McLaughlin.
Carney should push the Pact for the Future at UN, and a path to ‘brighter future for all of humanity’

It calls for addressing the root causes of conflicts and accelerating commitments on human rights. Most importantly, it brings into sharp focus the need for recommitment to international co-operation based on respect for international law.
Carney should heed his own advice from his bestselling book, Value(s)

Clean-energy projects—building out the grid, supporting renewable and other clean-tech investment, and financing efficiency—can deliver on affordability, growth, and sustainability goals. Carney and his key ministers should keep a copy of Value(s) by their bedsides.
Carney’s 15-per-cent challenge: cutting and rewiring Canada’s federal public service

Departments grapple with conflicting data as they race to finish the pivotal expenditure review the prime minister will use to reallocate resources.
Pride attendance may no longer be a litmus test for LGBTQ support, but absence still sends a message, say politicos

‘Pride is not necessarily welcoming to everyone anymore, and that’s the opposite of what it should be,’ says conservative commentator and transgender advocate Blaine Badiuk.
Carney’s trade talks demand transparency

Shifting deadlines may require discretion, but that’s no excuse to shield national decisions from democratic oversight and public scrutiny.
Ford’s blunt talk is refreshing

Canadian political leaders will have to stand up and fight back with diplomacy, gold-plated negotiating skills, wily charm, facts, and sometimes, they will need to speak bluntly for all to hear, like Ford, because sucking up doesn’t appear to be helping either. If this is a good-cop-bad-cop strategy, Ford’s doing the bad cop well.