June 26, 2014 at 7:58 pm by Willie Handler
A
surprise majority for the Liberals in the recent election is expected
to set a different tone in Queen’s Park after almost 3 years of minority
government. A minority government is all about survival, there is no
long-term planning. The Liberals could not focus on deficit reduction,
job creation, pensions or stabilizing the auto insurance product without
the confidence of having the support of the Legislature.
Despite campaigning under an activist
agenda, the Liberals are now signalling that they are serious about
deficit reduction. Deb Matthews has been appointed President/Chair of
Treasury Board/Management Board which traditionally has been a
responsibility of the Ministry of Finance. Treasury Board is not well
known outside of government but it is a powerful central agency that
manages the fiscal plan of the government including all government
spending and approving labour agreements. A very powerful body.
Charles Sousa continues as Minister of Finance and appears to still
be responsible for the auto insurance file. His Deputy, Steve Orsini
has been promoted to Secretary of Cabinet which is head of the Ontario
Public Service. His appointment is intended to also signal that the
Liberals are serious about deficit reduction. He replaces Peter Wallace
also preceded Orsini as Deputy Minister of Finance.
There has been some restructuring in the Ministry of Finance. The
Insurance and Cooperatives Policy Unit (which includes auto insurance
policy) and the Deposit Taking Institutions Unit of the Industrial and
Financial Services Branch will be reconstituted as the Financial
Institutions Policy Branch. They will continue to be led by Alvaro del
Castillo. Tthe Financial Institutions Policy Branch will join the
Securities Reform Division (SRD) reporting to Assistant Deputy Minister
Frank Allen who replaces Pat Deutscher. To better reflect its broader
mandate the SRD will be renamed the Financial Services Policy Division.
Next week, new MPPs will return to Queen’s Park to elect a new
Speaker of the Legislature (July 2), hear a new Speech from the Throne
(July 3), then debate a re-introduced provincial budget on July 14. It
is expected that shortly after that the Legislature will recess for the
summer. That might mean that the reintroduction of industry supported
bills such as Bills 171 and 189 might have to wait until the fall.
Source: https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=8201435313300764139#editor/target=post;postID=6637068326969657732
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