Cycling into Saigon

The Conservative Transition in Ontario

Par (auteur) David R. Cameron & Graham White
Catégories: Political Science
Éditeur: UBC Press
Paperback : 9780774808149, 224 pages, Mai 2001

Table des matières

Preface

1 Transitions

2 The 1985 and 1990 Transitions

3 Transition Building Blocks: Bureaucrats, Politicians, and Mandates

4 Bureaucratic Preparations

5 The Parties Prepare for Power

6 Cycling into Saigon: The Common Sense Revolutionaries Take Over

7 Not Politics but Good Government: Making Transitions Better

Appendices

A Two Public Policy Forum Documents Given to Opposition Parties

B Excerpts from Mission ’97

C The Liberal Approach to Organization, Management, and Decision-Making in the Government of Ontario

D The Conservative Transition Team

E Introduction to Political Briefing Material Given to Conservative Ministers

F Speech by Premier Harris to Deputy Ministers, 27 June 1995

G On the Record: Ensuring a Place in History / Peter DeLottinville and Ian E. Wilson

Notes

Bibliography

Index

La description

The essence of democracy is the peaceful and legitimate transfer of
government. In 1995 in Ontario, the omens for a successful transition
weren’t promising. Almost no one had expected Mike Harris’s
Common Sense Revolution to catapult his Progressive Conservatives from
third-party obscurity to victory in the June election. The Harris
manifesto declared its intention to dismantle almost every policy of
the defeated NDP administration of Bob Rae. Weeks of confrontation and
confusion seemed inevitable. Yet, as Cameron and White compellingly
describe, the transition was a surprising success, involving necessary
co-operation between political mortal enemies. Cycling into
Saigon has important lessons for everyone involved or interested
in this key stage of the electoral process, wherever it takes place.

Récompenses

  • Short-listed, Donner Prize, Donner Foundation 2001

Reviews

[This book] makes an important contribution to the sparse literature on transitions in Canada and in parliamentary regimes generally … A concluding section neatly sums up the authors’ advice on transition planning. It is so wise and plainly stated that their book will almost certainly become essential reading for future transition teams in Canada, and it merits attention in other parliamentary democracies as well.

- S.R.J. Noel

In this fascinating work, the authors examine how the transition of government in Ontario in 1995 was a surprising success involving, as it did, the necessity of co-operation between political mortal enemies. Cycling into Saigon has important lessons for everyone involved or interested in this key stage of the electoral process, wherever it takes place.

- The Donner Prize Jury