03/24/2025
GoC Executives - Your team’s looking to you during the election period.
This is the first election as public servants for many newer employees. The rules may feel fuzzy and the stakes high. And the caretaker convention isn’t actually light reading for most people - see below.
Your department should have a coordinated approach in place during the election period. But you will make the real difference to steady your team. Here is my take on the critical points:
🔹 Requests from Ministers' offices
Ministers are still Ministers — but the bar is higher for what public servants can support. If a request feels political, or just off, pause. Double check. It's not about saying “no” — it’s about ensuring neutrality.
🔹 Social media
Employees can post on personal time — but neutrality matters even more than usual. A quick reminder goes a long way: if it’s political and public, it reflects on them as public servants and can reflect on your organization. Encourage caution.
🔹 Spending
No new spending commitments, no high-profile announcements. Routine stuff? Probably ok, but check with your boss, the CFO and Comms for anything new or unusual. If it needs to go forward, there’s a process.
🔹 Stakeholders
Maintain relationships where critical, stay professional. When in doubt, double check. It’s fine to say, “We’re in the caretaker period — let’s reconnect after the election.”
You don’t need to be the expert. Just give your team clarity, calm, and the good judgement to double check when something feels off.
That’s what good leadership looks like right now.
Need a hand? Reach out!
Here is the convention -
In Canada’s form of democratic government, the legitimacy of the Government flows from its ability to command the confidence of the House of Commons. Following the dissolution of Parliament for an election, however, there is no elected chamber to confer confidence on the Government. Given this fac...