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e-Government at the crossroads

e-Government at the crossroads

By:  Jeffrey Roy  On: 31 Jan 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

As Stephen Harper’s Conservatives prepare to take office in Ottawa, many in technology circles are asking themselves: what will this new leader and his team have in store for e-government in Canada?

As Stephen Harper’s Conservatives prepare to take office in Ottawa, many in technology circles are asking themselves: what will this new leader and his team have in store for e-government in Canada?

Notwithstanding Accenture’s propensity to be kind to the Government of Canada, the past few years have not been the best of times for digital enthusiasts within and around the federal government. There has not been a permanent CIO in more than two years and many of the government’s key internal initiatives, notably shared IT services and Service Canada, are mired in political ambivalence and uncertainty as to how best to move forward.

Reg Alcock’s tenure as President of the Treasury Board has been a disappointment to many. Given his founding efforts with Crossing Boundaries prior to entering Cabinet, many carried high hopes for a true technology champion in government. Where better than the Treasury Board to instigate change? In his defence, sponsorship scandals and Gomery-driven discussions of new controls, coupled with minority status in Parliament, hardly made for ideal conditions to engineer meaningful reform.

Similarly, Scott Brison’s tenure at Public Works also fell short, as much noise about departmental restructuring and procurement reform led to little concrete action. It was clearly an error by the Martin government not to have seized on the sponsorship scandal as the occasion to disassemble this overly centralized bureaucracy in favour of a new set of more autonomous and specialized units (and of course, it is not too late to do so).

What became increasingly obvious this past year is that political visibility - on issues such as health care and survival, as with last year’s frantic budget negotiations – displaced any appetite for a meaningful (and particularly digital) transformation of the federal public sector.

Should we expect any better from the Conservatives? At first glance, the campaign revealed little. The Conservatives succeeded on the strength of a series of policy measures – such as lowering the GST, new defence and security initiatives, a child tax credit and others – that were cleverly complemented by promises to tackle corruption and waste. On the former, the Liberals appeared stale and scattered; on the latter, they proved deeply vulnerable.

Against that backdrop, the election campaign left little room for discussions of managerial and technological reform (as is usually the case). The most broadly based question therefore becomes how the Conservatives will choose to organize the federal apparatus to achieve their political objectives.

There are nonetheless three important sub-themes that will define the Conservative approach to technology and e-government. The first is whether the new government will view digital governance as an instrument of greater efficiency or rather, more ambitious organizational renewal. Under pressure to avoid deficits, political leaders are often inclined to view digitally induced changes as a means to achieve savings.


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Jeffrey Roy Jeffrey Roy is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.

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