The following is a transcript of Parliamentary Budget Officer Kevin Pageās interview with Question Period.
Kevin Newman: Give me some adjectives to describe what the jobās been like for you?
Kevin Page: Scary, at times -- releasing a report on Afghanistan. Exhilarating, at times -- getting calls from people in your industry the day after the Auditor General report comes out saying, āGuess what?ā when you were being criticized a year prior on your costing of the F-35 fighter plane, the government was actually providing the same numbers, actually larger to cabinet but werenāt showing them to Canadians and Parliament, even though they were requested.
Were they trying to shut you down, or just intimidate you?
Well, I think it was a bit of both. I mean, it definitely was intimidation. They definitely saw a window of opportunity to shut it down in 2009. Cut your budget by a third, saw in that committee report that all your work has to be confidential. Which goes against any kind of work to be done by any legislative budget officer anywhere in the world, so to me that was both intimidation -- basically to get me to quit.
Did you think about it?
I did. Yeah actually, I came very close. When that joint report was released, it was supported by the senate, I remember going home, I went to my wife and said, āI have no clients.ā
And so, yeah my wife said, no you cannot quit. And some of the people in the office said, āWe gotta keep goingā ā¦. I drafted an action plan ā¦ but I will explain how I will not do anything confidential.ā
Some of the criticism you received from ministers has been quite pointed. Did you think it was personal?
Often what we got from, you know, the fall of 2008 onwards is yeah, this is academic or youāre unbelievable, this is unreliable. Youāre changing your mind. So in a sense at that level, it sounds very personal.ā
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It has been a tumultuous five years building the Parliamentary Budget Office ā with him every step of the way has been his wife Julie. They knew going in the acrimony would end his 30-year career in the public service -- that he was likely to make enemies, and he did in some of the most powerful cabinet ministers in town.
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(To Julie Page) Did you feel protective of him?
He handles himself. He doesnāt need my protection. Heās pretty stubborn, and tough. But no, it was upsetting. I think the main thing thatās upsetting is someone whoās in the public eye and people make assumptions about what sort of person that is, why heās doing it -- that heās enjoying being in the media and all those sorts of things. Most people he didnāt even want the job in the first place. All those people that went to the interview had to be talked into it.
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The Parliamentary Budget Office was designed to challenge executive authority by giving MPs their own set of financial estimates for spending the Cabinet was approving. Page took it a step further, insisting his work be made public to influence policy debate -- nowhere more directly than when he estimated the cost of the Afghan war.
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And then weāre in the middle of an election campaign. Youāve completed a report which says the cost as you know it to be for the Afghan Mission was almost $10 billion higher than the prime minister was campaigning on at the time. You know this town: When thereās an election on, thereās a lid on it.
Yes.
Nobody says a thing. And yet you had to decide whether it was in the public interest.
Yes.
Tell me more about what those discussions were like in this office.
Difficult, and we weighed it. When you look at it from a political perspective, we saw losses. We saw on one side if we didnāt release the report we could be accused of looking partisan. You know, perhaps weāre doing something to favour the government. If we released the report we thought the government would assume weāre punching them right in the nose. And what is the public interest? The interest is transparency, and you know we had not seen a costing of Afghanistan at that time and were about to lose our 100th soldier.
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The Conservative cabinet that hired him probably underestimated pageās stubborn streak. Growing up in Thunder Bay he was the son of a mechanic. He coaches hockey where the mantra for his peewee players is āWork hard. Never give up.ā And he has suffered terrible personal loss. Two year before being offered the PBO job, his 21-year old son Tyler was killed late one night by a train.
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How did you, I mean this is going to be a silly question, but how did you keep going?
Well, I mean you try to find meaning in that suffering. Youāre suffering and you try toā¦ what do you do with that suffering? If you were given this opportunity to build something for the country -- an institution that hadnāt existed before -- and then all of a sudden thereās meaning, and then surrounding yourself with just an amazing crew of people I get to work with on a daily basis.
That really helped -- even when the job got difficult and there were, you know, people were reacting negatively to the work we were doing, the costing of the war or even some of our economic and fiscal projections.
And then it got you know critical, you raised, raised the point earlier, it got personal and I think, I hope I rose above that part of it and as you say, you have to be very professional. You talk about the products.
Did it take away the fear?
Yes I think it takes away the fear of, you know, that maybe theyāll take your job away. After youāre going through that kind of experience as well, thatās not so important really -- Iāll find another job.
Julie Page: I donāt know if this is how Kevin sees it but when you lose your child you sort of, you have to get up every morning and forgive yourself for still being here, and then you have to go on and face the day and you try to make that a decision. And I think this job gave him a lot of opportunity to try and make those right decisions, those better decisions.
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This last week on the job, Kevin Page was invited to speak to Carleton Universityās public service program -- a man at the end of his career telling the next generation they have a bright future, because things have never been worse in Ottawa.
Kevin Page said at various times that the public service is under attack:
"For me, one of the reasons why itās the best time to be a public servant is because in my 30-plus years Iāve never seen weaker public sector leadership."
"There is so much fear in this town. Itās... Iāve never seen this much fear before."
"I would say our institutions of accountability are completely under attack. Under attack like Iāve never seen before."
"We are tearing down parliament right now. Thatās my personal opinion. Thatās why you stand up. This is the time to be a public servant. Itās a time to build, guess what? This is your opportunity. This is your time to build."
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Youāre going to be looking for work now. Under what circumstances would you consider running for political office?
I have no intention of running for political office. My wife would, you know, after 30 years, I think that would be it for her.
You used the word āintentionā though, which is one of those code words around here that says, well, heās not really saying no.
Iām not a politician.
You couldnāt be loyal to one party?
That would be a problem for me.