Posts Tagged ‘Ambassador Doer’

April 26, 2012: Ottawa

Thursday, May 3rd, 2012

Last night Ambassador Doer and I were the co-hosts of the Politics and the Pen dinner in Ottawa, a fundraising event in support of the Writers’ Trust of Canada, that celebrates Canadian political and literary cultures. It was great fun.

For those of you who might not be familiar with it, the centerpiece of the evening is the award of the  Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for the best political writing in Canada, awarded this year to Richard Gwyn for his biography Nation Maker: Sir John A. Macdonald: His Life, Our Times; Volume Two: 1867-1891.

The Writers’ Trust celebrates and rewards the talents and achievements of Canada’s novelists, short story writers, poets, biographers, and other fiction and nonfiction writers. Recent award winners include: Patrick DeWitt, Wayne Johnston, and David Adams Richards.

Besides authors, some of others in attendance were: Laureen Harper, Finance Minister Flaherty, Foreign Affairs Minister Baird, Liberal Leader Rae and NDP Leader Tom Mulcair. Really, about the only way you can get in the door is to be an author or get elected to Parliament.

I agreed to co-host the event because I support the writers of Canada.  Oh yea, and my wife Julie was the co-chair of the event.

Julie and David Jacobson with author Ron Graham at a reception for the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize finalists. (Credit: Steve Gerecke)

The hosts are supposed to be funny.  And I have got to tell you that adds A LOT of pressure.  As Amb. Doer said, they don’t pay us to be funny.  But we seemed to do ok.  The theme of our effort was Thrilla on the Hilla – Part II.  We both came out in boxing robes and gloves.  Got a few laughs.  Still, I think I’ll keep my day job and leave comedy to the professionals.  As we stepped off the stage, I thought of one of my favorite lines from Winston Churchill:  “Nothing is quite so exhilarating as to be shot at and missed.”

Co-hosts David Jacobson and Gary Doer, Ambassador of Canada to the U.S. have some fun on stage (Photo Credit: Jake Wright)

DJ

September 16, 2011: Boston

Monday, September 19th, 2011

Today Ambassador Doer and I spoke at a breakfast meeting of the New England Council, where we had a chance to talk about Beyond the Border, Regulatory Cooperation, and other key issues.     

Ambassador Jacobson and Ambassador Doer at the Hampshire House above the famous "Cheers" bar

The meeting took place at the Hampshire House which, those of you who are familiar with Boston know, is the restaurant upstairs of the famous bar where the television program Cheers was set. Unfortunately, the bar wasn’t open at 7:30 am when we arrived. So – instead of a beer – we had to settle for a photo.

DJ

July 12, 2011: Halifax

Friday, July 15th, 2011

I just finished attending the 35th Annual New England Governors and Eastern Premiers Conference in Halifax. It was a great opportunity to discuss the regional issues that confront the leaders of our states and provinces. In addition to the Premiers and Governors, Ambassador Doer and I were invited to participate along with the U.S. Consul General from Halifax and the Canadian Consul General from Boston.

I arrived on Saturday night from Calgary. Having a free night in Halifax I did what any self-respecting Chicagoan would do. I went out for a lobster supper at Salty’s. Highly recommended.

On Sunday, before the meeting started, I played a round of golf with Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter, Ambassador Doer, and new Member of Parliament — but long-time political figure in Nova Scotia — Robert Chisholm. The weather was beautiful. The course magnificent. And you will all be happy to know that – judging by our golf games on Sunday – none of us can be accused of not spending enough time in the office.

After golf I had a chance to meet with New Brunswick Premier David Alward. We shared a few laughs, and talked about issues ranging from border security to the best fishing locations in New Brunswick.

Ambassador Jacobson and New Brunswick Premier David Alward

Then it was off to dinner with the Premiers, and Governors, several of their spouses, Ambassador Doer and the Consuls General at the Halifax Club, which dates back to 1862.

There is at least one part of these meetings that reminds me of an out-of-town weekend wedding. While the topics of conversation are quite a bit different, in the same way as at weddings, the group tends to coalesce as the days go by. People who were casual acquaintances – or totally unfamiliar – become friends. It is easy to forget that high level government officials are people. (Or at least, generally.) When you are able to establish a personal bond it is so much easier to conduct business and to solve problems later on. To me, this is one of the most important parts of these events.

On Monday we started early and ended late. There were a series of presentations including Managing the new Fiscal Reality, Enhancing the Trade Relationship, Maximizing the Potential of Each Region’s Energy Resources, Confronting our Environmental Challenges and an Update on the Lower Churchill Development.

After some press interviews, we bussed out to the Dauphinee Inn which is a beautiful place on the South Shore of Nova Scotia about 30 mins from Halifax. I told Premier Dexter I was tempted to move there.

The South Shore of Nova Scotia

We then went to the Shore Club for yet another lobster dinner and some good Nova Scotia music.

On Tuesday I gave a speech on the Beyond the Border Vision to a big lunch crowd from the Halifax Chamber of Commerce. Then, after a week on the road, I flew home and fell promptly to sleep.

One last point: I often talk about the value of competition (I used to do antitrust litigation). So I want to give a shout-out to one of my new competitors in the Ottawa diplomatic blog world. The High Commissioner from the United Kingdom, Andrew Pocock, has launched his new blog with his description of our Arctic Trip. Andrew is much wittier that I am. So I will have to up my game to keep pace. Check him out at http://blogs.fco.gov.uk/roller/pocock/.

DJ

July 8 2011: Calgary Stampede

Wednesday, July 13th, 2011

This is my second Stampede and I’m starting to get the hang of things. I can definitely say that Calgary is NOT a one horse town. 

We got up early for the kick-off breakfast. The Grand Marshall of the Stampede is Rick Hansen. He gave one of his moving and emotional speeches. I’ve said it before, but he is a real Canadian treasure. 

At the Calgary Stampede


Then it was on to the parade. There were hundreds of thousands of people lining the parade route. It started with the Royal Couple. Rick Hansen rolled the whole route in this chair. Then there were horses, wagons, floats, bands, and every manner of entertainment. The Stampede is known as the Greatest Outdoor Show on Earth and I’m not about to disagree. 

We then went to the Calgary Zoo to see the Royal Couple off from Canada. Having been lucky enough to be at four events during their nine-day Canada tour I am reminded of a great line from Premier Dalton McGuinty last year as he accompanied the Queen to several events on her tour. At one event he got up to speak and he said that he had been traveling around with the Queen and it was amazing how many people had been showing up to see him. Same deal. Everywhere I went with the Duke and Duchess there were huge crowds. No doubt for me!  (For those of you who don’t get my jokes — both Premier McGuinty and I are kidding!!!) 

The Duchess of Cambridge visiting Calgary


Next I went to watch some rodeo. The people in the store were right. No one made fun of my skeleton shirt — at least not to my face. We spent the afternoon watching the festivities with Jim and Karen Prentice, Steve Snyder of TransAlta, and a bunch of friends including Ambassador Gary Doer.  

I finished the day with a late night dinner with Ambassador Doer, his wife Ginny, one of my predecessors Ambassador Gordon Giffin, and his wife Patty. We compared “ambassador notes” and settled a few bets. Great fun. But we had to get to bed. Tomorrow, Ambassador Doer and I fly to Halifax for the Eastern Premieres and the New England Governors’ Conference.  

DJ

June 1, 2011: Game on!

Wednesday, June 1st, 2011

You might have heard there’s a hockey game tonight. And, I’m laying it on the line for my country!

Ambassador Gary Doer, Canada’s fine Ambassador to the U.S., and I have the following bet on the Vancouver-Boston series. And I don’t have to tell you who I’m betting on.

I read an article over the weekend about how the Canadian restaurant chain Boston Pizza was changing the names of its restaurants in Vancouver – at least during the Stanley Cup – to Vancouver Pizza.

To that end, we will match Boston Pie against Vancouver Pie.

If the Vancouver Canucks win the Stanley Cup I will treat my friend Ambassador Doer to a Vancouver (or maybe it will be back to Boston) Pizza Pie.

If the Boston Bruins win, Ambassador Doer will treat me to a Boston (or maybe they will change it to Vancouver) Cream Pie at the Parker House in Boston.

Either one goes well with beer. Game on!

DJ

February 24, 2011 — Toronto

Sunday, February 27th, 2011

I was at the Toronto car show to see the new cars and to meet with a group of auto industry leaders about the Canada – U.S. regulatory cooperation effort. While we are still developing the agenda, one of the first places we’re likely to start is with autos. It is the most integrated part of our economy (the average car goes back and forth across the border about seven times during production). And the cost of regulatory differences is huge.

Speaking with auto industry leaders at the Toronto Car Show

I was joined by several colleagues from the Embassy and our Toronto Consulate. On the Canadian side, I was joined by Ambassador Doer, Environment Minister Kent, and representatives of several ministries. We heard many good suggestions on how we can achieve our goals and how we can get started quickly.

No one attending these meetings could have any doubt that both our governments, in partnership with the private sector, are committed to achieving success in overcoming the “tyranny of small differences.”

I also got a chance both yesterday and in a trip last week to see the new cars. I have been a fan of cars and car shows for years. This one really showed me how North American manufacturers have dramatically improved their product lines. There are now more practical reasons than ever — not just national pride — to buy a car made in North America.

DJ

September 21, 2010 – Ottawa

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

I know I have been a real deadbeat at making blog entries.  But Parliament is back in session.  So I guess I should be too.

Just so you don’t think I have been asleep at the switch over the last few weeks, let me give you a few highlights.

The week before last, Speaker Pelosi and Congressman Markey visited Ottawa.  They were here to listen and learn about energy and environmental issues in Canada.  They met with elected officials, industry leaders, heads of environmental groups, and chiefs of First Nations.  Pretty much everything that happened was extensively reported and commented on by the press.  So let me give you a couple of things the press hasn’t covered.

Speaker Pelosi was unfailingly kind to everyone she met.  I know this isn’t what the press typically focuses on with public figures.  But it was certainly true.  I always believe you can tell a great deal about people based on the little things they do for people who aren’t in obvious positions to return the favors.  While I could make a long list about the Speaker, two come quickly to mind.  First, when we were meeting with the group of environmental NGOs and First Nation Chiefs, we were planning on going around the table in an order that had been agreed upon by the NGOs and the First Nations.  Speaker Pelosi insisted on reversing the order.  Explaining that the Chiefs were from the FIRST Nations and that she wanted to start with a better understanding of how the oil sands had impacted their communities.  Later, we were at the airport as she was about to leave.  She delayed her military plane while she stopped and had her pictures taken with EVERYONE:  The RCMP who had been with her on the trip.  The staff at the airport.  The drivers.  Everyone.  And she had small gifts and mementos for every single person.  Pretty nice.

During one of our meetings we were talking about the U.S. Stimulus package.  Congressman Markey told a wonderful joke which made his point very effectively.  There was a boy who hates kreplach (a Jewish traditional food which is kind of like ravioli – this joke would probably get more laughs in New York).  Every time his mother serves it he says “Oh no.  I hate kreplach.”  One day his mother has had enough and she takes the kreplach apart for her son.  She says, “You like meat don’t you?”  The son says, “of course.”  She says, “You like potatoes don’t you?”  The son says, “Yes.”  She says, “You like dough don’t you?”  The son says, “Sure.”  The mother then rolls up the ingredients and hands them back to her son who says: “Oh no.  I hate kreplach.”  As the Congressman explained, people love the tax cuts in the stimulus.  They love the money for alternative energy.  They love the money for schools and roads.  But they hate the stimulus.

Speaking with students from the University of Saskatchewan

Last week I went to Saskatchewan and Alberta.  I started out with a tour 640 meters underground at the world’s largest uranium mine in McArthur River.  Then I went to Saskatoon where I gave a speech about energy and the environment.  I followed it up with a meeting with a group of students at the University of Saskatchewan.  I love these events.  Students invariably ask the best questions.  And their enthusiasm is infectious.  It was also fun to run into two students I had met at the G-20 meetings in Toronto as part of the global student leaders meetings.

Speaking at the American Chamber of Commerce in Saskatoon

The next morning we flew to Calgary were I gave another speech on energy and the environment and met with the editorial board of the Calgary Herald.  I’ll let them cover the substance of our conversations.  But one thing I must mention is that we visited the tree they planted in front of the building to honor Michelle Lang, the reporter who was with us in Afghanistan last Christmas and who was killed there two days after we left.  I said to her former colleagues what I said at the time.  She loved her work.  And she did it very well.

With former U.S. Ambassadors to Canada Paul Cellucci and Gordon Giffin

On Thursday morning we drove to Banff to attend the Global Business Forum.  Great sessions with a group of very interesting people.  There were two highlights – at least for me.  First, my three predecessors, Ambassadors Giffin, Cellucci, and Wilkins were on a panel together to talk about the upcoming midterm elections in the U.S. and the impact they might have on Canada.  I was very happy to see that there was life after being an Ambassador.  It also made it clear to me why everyone tells me my predecessors were so great.  (And why the long-time staff at the Embassy tells me I ought to be funnier.)  Second, I was on a panel with Ambassador Doer where we talked about the status of U.S.-Canada relations.  We both agreed they were generally great except for the hard feelings south of the border about hockey!

Talking U.S.-Canada relations (and hockey) with Ambassador Doer in Banff

I then flew to Montreal to have dinner with Julie and my son on his 21st birthday – pretty special.

I finally made it back to Ottawa where I spoke on Sunday morning at the Terry Fox Run.  Then on Sunday night we began a three day meeting with the seven United States Consuls General from around Canada where we plan for the future and compare notes on the past.  We just finished up that meeting with a walk in Gatineau Park and lunch at the Mackenzie King Tea Room.

 Lots going on.  I am going to try to keep up a little better so these things don’t have to be sooooooo long!!!

 DJ

July 13, 2010 – Washington, D.C.

Monday, July 19th, 2010

I went to D.C. for a meeting last week with Secretary of Homeland Security Janet Napolitano, Minister of Public Safety Vic Toews, Ambassador Gary Doer and others, to discuss how the United States and Canada can work together to protect North America. I have often said that it is a false choice between security and efficiency. If we’re creative and smart, we can have both. Part of that will require that we view the border as the last line of defense, and not the first.

Today’s meeting was a step in that direction. Minister Toews and Secretary Napolitano meet at least twice a year to discuss common issues. And their staffs work together on a daily basis both in Ottawa and in Washington. A product of that effort was a set of four agreements between the United States and Canada and we will continue to work together on our strategic relationship here in North America.

While I was in D.C., I used the opportunity to meet with several of my friends and colleagues at the State Department, the Department of Homeland Security, and the White House. While it was great to see so many people, one bears special mention. My good friend Norm Eisen is currently Special Counsel to the President in the White House Counsel’s Office. But he is about to move on. He was recently nominated by the President as the next Ambassador to the Czech Republic.

While I am happy for Norm (and the people in the Czech Republic, to say nothing of the American people) his appointment is a particularly poignant one. During World War II Norm’s mother, who now lives on the West Coast, was deported from Czechoslovakia to a Nazi concentration camp in Germany. While she survived, many of her family members and friends did not. After the war, she came to live in the United States.

There is something special about the fact that her son, a brilliant lawyer who was a friend and classmate of the President, is returning to his family’s homeland as the United States Ambassador.
DJ

March 16, 2010 – NORAD

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Last night I arrived in Colorado Springs and met Ambassador Doer for a joint tour of NORAD which stands for North American Aerospace Defense Command. We started with a briefing from General Gene Renuart of the US Air Force, the Commander of NORAD and NORTHCOM and Lt. General Marcel Duval of the Canadian Forces and the Deputy Commander of NORAD.

Canadian Ambassador Gary Doer, General Gene Renuart of the US Air Force, and Ambassador Jacobson in front of NORAD

Canadian Ambassador Gary Doer, General Gene Renuart of the US Air Force, and Ambassador Jacobson in front of NORAD


For those of you who aren’t up to speed on NORAD, it is unique in the world. For the last 52 years, the United States and Canada have operated a joint command to defend the airspace of North America. There are four facilities, the headquarters in Colorado Springs, the Canadian Forces base in Winnipeg (which I visited in November), Elmendorf Air Force Base in Alaska, and Tyndall Air Force Base in Florida.

After our meeting with General Renuart, we had a series of briefings by the Canadian and US military and civilian advisors. I then got a tour of Cheyenne Mountain, the place in a hollowed out granite mountain which would serve as the control center in the event of a catastrophic attack on North America. (Ambassador Doer had gotten his tour the prior afternoon.) While it is a little chilling, it is interesting how US and Canadian forces work side-by-side in a truly joint operation. Throughout the facilities there were Canadian and American flags, pictures of the President and the Prime Minister, soldiers from both countries. It is an example of how integrated our militaries are in the very most sensitive of missions.
As Ambassador Doer said, it’s one to cross off our bucket list.
DJ

At the entrance of Cheyenne Mountain

At the entrance of Cheyenne Mountain

Back in Ottawa

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

This morning I had breakfast with my old law school friend John Podesta, who is currently the President of the Center for American Progress (CAP), the leading progressive think tank in Washington. Prior to forming CAP, John was the Chief of Staff to President Clinton. John was very smart and thoughtful 30 years ago when we sat together in class. And he hasn’t lost a step. He spoke about his efforts at CAP and the priorities of the Obama Administration which John has had such a hand in shaping. He was the co-chair of President Obama’s transition team and 50 of his CAP alumni are serving in the Obama Administration — including several good friends of mine in the White House. Also at breakfast were Ambassador Doer, back from Washington, Ministers Prentice and Flaherty, and several others from the United States and Canada.

I then had the honor of joining Speaker of the Senate, Noel Kinsella, Senators Angus and Johnson, and some of their staff for lunch in the Speaker’s dining room. As luck would have it, this was the same room, and I was in the same chair, that President Obama used during his visit to Ottawa in February. The Speaker showed me a framed photo of the occasion and the pen the President used to sign the House and Senate guest books. I was honored that it warranted such a prominent place in such an important room.

With Speaker of the Senate Noel Kinsella

With Speaker of the Senate Noel Kinsella

In Speaker of the Senate Noel Kinsella's office

In Speaker of the Senate Noel Kinsella's office

After lunch we watched the weekly Speaker’s Long Parade led by Speaker Kinsella, the President Pro Tempore, the Usher of the Black Rod, the Mace Bearer and others. Unlike the daily Speaker’s Parade, the Long Parade marches down the north corridor, through Confederation Hall, approaching the Chamber from the heart of the Centre Block. We then went to the Governor General’s Gallery where we watched the opening of the Senate session. Speaker Kinsella was kind enough to introduce me to the Senate which was a warm moment.

I particularly enjoyed watching the Senate Pages. My son was a Page in the United States Senate. It brought back fond memories of Julie and I watching endless hours of CSPAN waiting for our son to deliver an amendment or to bring someone a glass of water. DJ.