Ht-Logo-gigapixel-icon
Monday, November 25, 2024
Canada’s Politics and Government News Source Since 1989
Monday, November 25, 2024 | Latest Paper

Maxime Boucher

Maxime Boucher is a research associate at the University of Waterloo.

Democracy in extraordinary times

Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2021
Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger, left, and Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion are pictured. In a time of crisis, when the executive branch of government has been granted even more power, the officers of Parliament have kept playing their role as the non-partisan guardians of our democratic tradition, writes Maxime Boucher. The Hill Times photographs by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2021
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2021
Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger, left, and Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion are pictured. In a time of crisis, when the executive branch of government has been granted even more power, the officers of Parliament have kept playing their role as the non-partisan guardians of our democratic tradition, writes Maxime Boucher. The Hill Times photographs by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2021
Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger, left, and Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion are pictured. In a time of crisis, when the executive branch of government has been granted even more power, the officers of Parliament have kept playing their role as the non-partisan guardians of our democratic tradition, writes Maxime Boucher. The Hill Times photographs by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2021
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2021
Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger, left, and Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion are pictured. In a time of crisis, when the executive branch of government has been granted even more power, the officers of Parliament have kept playing their role as the non-partisan guardians of our democratic tradition, writes Maxime Boucher. The Hill Times photographs by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2020
One of our studies titled 'Who you know in the PMO' published in Canadian Public Administration shows that the most active corporate lobbies in Ottawa are also those that establish consistent relationships with the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and other central agencies such as the Privy Council Office, writes Maxime Boucher. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2020
Opinion | BY MAXIME BOUCHER | January 20, 2020
One of our studies titled 'Who you know in the PMO' published in Canadian Public Administration shows that the most active corporate lobbies in Ottawa are also those that establish consistent relationships with the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) and other central agencies such as the Privy Council Office, writes Maxime Boucher. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade