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Book cover: Research in Public Policy Analysis and Management

Research in Public Policy Analysis and Management

ISSN: 0732-1317
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Subject Area: Sociology and Public Policy

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Political Ethics and Responsible Government


Document Information:
Title:Political Ethics and Responsible Government
Author(s):Andrew Potter
Volume:14 Editor(s): Denis Saint-Martin, Fred Thompson ISBN: 978-0-76231-226-9 eISBN: 978-1-84950-355-6
Citation:Andrew Potter (2006), Political Ethics and Responsible Government, in Denis Saint-Martin, Fred Thompson (ed.) Public Ethics and Governance: Standards and Practices in Comparative Perspective (Research in Public Policy Analysis and Management, Volume 14), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, pp.71-91
DOI:10.1016/S0732-1317(05)14005-6 (Permanent URL)
Publisher:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Article type:Chapter Item
Abstract:In 2004, the Canadian government appointed an ethics commissioner reporting directly to Parliament. I show how an appeal of the ethics commissioner finds its traction in three problem areas. First, there is an increasing distaste in Canada for patronage and other similar forms of partisanship in politics, but there is general uncertainty about the constitutional or ethical standards that ought to apply. Second, the language of democratic criticism and reform of Parliament is rooted less in actual constitutional practice than in an idealized sense of how Parliament ought to work, a problem that is exacerbated by the ongoing presence of the American example. Finally, these both feed into a growing disengagement from traditional party politics and a desire for more “independent” or non-partisan checks on government, of which the Office of the Auditor General is becoming a popular exemplar. As an independent, Parliamentary, and non-partisan check on government, the ethics commissioner appears to serve as at least a partial solution to much of what is wrong with the Canadian political system.

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