Remember this guy?
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080130.wgom0130/BNStory/National/home
Gomery disappointed in Harper
JIM BROWN
Canadian Press
January 30, 2008 at 7:57 PM EST
OTTAWA — The man who investigated the sponsorship scandal says Prime Minister Stephen Harper seems to have abandoned any commitment he once had to transparent government in favour of a top-down style that centralizes power in his own hands.
John Gomery, in a wide-ranging interview marking the second anniversary of his final report, expressed dismay that the federal Conservatives have ignored his key recommendations for reform.
“I have to tell you, I'm very disappointed,” Mr. Gomery said from the farm in Havelock, Que., where he now lives in retirement.
“I worked so hard, and I got other people to work hard, and we gave very serious thought to what we were recommending. I thought it deserved a debate.”
Instead, said the former judge, most of the political and bureaucratic changes he proposed fell into a “black hole” of indifference or were rejected out of hand.
His verdict on the Harper government is harsh: “They were glad to see the end of the commission (of inquiry), and they'd like me to disappear. . . . I'm a pain, I'm a bit of a menace.”
Ironically, it was Mr. Gomery's scathing indictment of the previous Liberal government that was widely credited with paving the road to Tory power in the 2006 election.
In his first report in November 2005, Mr. Gomery concluded that millions of taxpayer dollars had been skimmed by Liberal-friendly ad agencies, and some of the cash had flowed back to the party in under-the-table kickbacks.
Though he found no personal wrongdoing by Jean Chrétien, he held the Liberal prime minister politically responsible for letting things go off the rails — a finding that so incensed Mr. Chrétien he went to court to try to quash it.
Mr. Gomery followed up with a second report — released two years ago this Friday — in which he offered a recipe for changing the way business is done in Ottawa.
Among other things, he called for:
— An end to the prime minister's exclusive power to appoint deputy ministers, the senior bureaucrats in every federal department.
— Curbing the authority of the Clerk of the Privy Council, the prime minister's bureaucratic right-hand man.
— More money and staff for the Commons public accounts committee to boost its role as watchdog over government spending.
The overall goal was to reverse a growing trend — decades in the making — toward centralization of power in the hands of the prime minister and his inner circle, a situation that critics saw as an invitation to the abuse of power.
It was a goal that Mr. Harper appeared to share when he was in opposition, says Mr. Gomery. But since he took power “there's more concentration of power in the Prime Minister's Office than we've ever had before, which is quite remarkable in a minority government, but he's pulled it off.”
Mr. Gomery also points to the Tory failure to revamp the Access to Information Act to make it easier for journalists and other citizens to pry documentation from the bureaucracy.
“The government was saying at the time (of the report) that transparency was very important and that they wanted to improve transparency. In practice it's been an exact reverse.”