Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T02:35:30.089Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ministerial Mandate Letters and Co-ordination in the Canadian Executive

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 December 2023

Kenny William Ie*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of British Columbia, Buchanan Building, C425, 1866 Main Mall, Vancouver, BC V6T1Z1, Canada
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Prime ministers in parliamentary systems confront a challenging agency problem in leading cabinets toward cross-government priorities: ministers tend to prioritize departmental interests and may lack incentives and/or information enabling co-ordinated effort. In Canada, a novel mechanism for both increasing incentives and information provision has been developed in recent decades: the mandate letter. These letters are issued by Canadian prime ministers to their ministers, reinforcing government priorities, each minister's responsibilities, and specific policy expectations. This article examines mandate letters as mechanisms inducing interministerial policy co-ordination, focusing on the 2015–2021 period, under Justin Trudeau, as the first Canadian prime minister to release these letters publicly. Using topic modelling and social network analysis, I find that Trudeau has increasingly sought to strengthen ministerial co-ordination and ministers’ focus on crosscutting policy priorities. This case study contributes to our understanding of intraexecutive co-ordination and the agency problem in cabinet government.

Résumé

Résumé

Dans les systèmes parlementaires, les premiers ministres sont confrontés à un problème de délégation difficile lorsqu'il s'agit de diriger les cabinets vers des priorités intergouvernementales : les ministres ont tendance à donner la priorité aux intérêts ministériels et peuvent manquer d'incitations et/ou d'informations permettant de coordonner les efforts. Au Canada, un nouveau mécanisme a été mis au point au cours des dernières décennies pour renforcer les incitations et l'information : la « lettre de mandat ». Ces lettres sont envoyées par les premiers ministres canadiens à leurs ministres, renforçant les priorités du gouvernement, les responsabilités de chaque ministre et les attentes spécifiques en matière de politique. Cet article examine les lettres de mandat en tant que mécanismes induisant une coordination politique interministérielle, en se concentrant sur la période 2015-2021, sous Justin Trudeau, premier Premier ministre canadien à publier ces lettres. En utilisant la modélisation thématique et l'analyse des réseaux sociaux, je constate que Trudeau a de plus en plus cherché à renforcer la coordination ministérielle et l'accent mis par les ministres sur les priorités politiques transversales. Cette étude de cas contribue à notre compréhension de la coordination intra-exécutif et du problème de la délégation dans le gouvernement de Cabinet.

Type
Research Article/Étude originale
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Canadian Political Science Association (l’Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique

Introduction

Prime ministers in parliamentary systems are leaders of a collective executive, delegating policy responsibilities to their ministers. In doing so, they face the problem of agency loss: misalignment of interests or effort between prime ministers and ministers as their agents (Strøm, Reference Strøm2000; Berlinski et al., Reference Berlinski, Dewan and Dowding2010). Prime ministers have an array of tools to mitigate agency loss, including oversight by central agencies, control over cabinet process, coalition arrangements in multiparty executive contexts, and power to select, deselect or shuffle ministers. In recent decades, Canadian prime ministers have implemented a novel method of aligning their interests with ministerial activity: the mandate letter. These letters are documents provided to each minister, reinforcing government-wide priorities, explaining the minister's responsibilities and stating specific policy expectations for the minister's performance, creating essentially a contract for ministers to fulfill (Zussman, Reference Zussman2013: 22). They have been adopted at the subnational level in almost all Canadian provinces; Australian governments at both federal and state levels have also implemented a variant called charter letters (Weller, Reference Weller2007).

In 2015, Justin Trudeau became the first Canadian prime minister to publicly release these letters under the guise of accountability. The government itself, for example, maintained a mandate tracker on its website, which concluded that 68 per cent of mandate letter commitments had been fully met in the Liberal government's first term (Privy Council Office, 2019). Although mandate letters are well established and important to cabinet government in Canada, scholarly analysis of these letters is notably absent. This article seeks to fill the gap by examining Trudeau's mandate letters from 2015 to 2021, from the perspective of policy co-ordination. Our core research question is: how do mandate letters induce interministerial co-ordination on policy tasks? Using automated quantitative content analysis (topic models) and social network analysis methods, I demonstrate that Trudeau's mandate letters have increasingly sought to strengthen horizontal co-ordination of ministerial activity: expectations for interministerial collaboration and engagement on policy tasks have grown over time. Correspondingly, ministerial performance increasingly depends on a minister's ability to work productively with cabinet colleagues rather than individual or departmental achievement. The pattern of increasing ministerial co-ordination also has implications for broader debates over centralization of power in Canada.

The article proceeds as follows. First, I describe mandate letters in further detail and the relevant literature. Second, I provide a conceptual and theoretical framing of mandate letters in terms of the principal-agent problem and policy co-ordination. This section also introduces the context of Justin Trudeau's government and approach to cabinet decision making. Third, I discuss the study's data and methodological approaches. The fourth section relates the article's findings. Finally, I discuss these findings and directions for future research.

Mandate Letters

Mandate letters are documents issued by Canadian prime ministers or provincial premiers to each cabinet minister outlining overall government priorities, advice on ministerial behaviour, and specific tasks and responsibilities in each portfolio (Zussman, Reference Zussman2013: 93). They have been issued federally since the 1970s (Savoie, Reference Savoie1999a: 343), and most provincial governments have also adopted the practice. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has issued full sets of letters four times as of this writing: after the 2015, 2019 and 2021 elections, and in January 2021 to address the COVID-19 pandemic. Letters were typically issued annually under Trudeau's predecessor, Stephen Harper (Brodie, Reference Brodie2018: 119). However, despite their long-standing existence, mandate letters have not been examined by scholars except in passing or as relevant to specific policy issues. Public availability of the letters since 2015 has led to media commentary (for example, McParland, Reference McParland2019; Wells, Reference Wells2020), but scholarly analysis has been absent.

What we do know about mandate letters is somewhat partial given the fragmented literature, much of which is now not recent. Often, development of mandate letters begins with the transition team preparing a party leader for government or with the political staff in the Prime Minister's Office (Zussman, Reference Zussman2013: 93; Marland, Reference Marland2016: 214). Savoie (Reference Savoie1999a) found that civil servants in the Privy Council Office write and finalize the letters in the post-election period, but they are distributed to ministers in the name of the prime minister. As Zussman (Reference Zussman2013: 177–78) reports, mandate letters contain partisan commitments, policy directives, and guidance on how to be an effective minister. The mixture of these aspects varies by prime minister, but the trend has been toward greater elaboration. Zussman (Reference Zussman2013: 93–94, 178) also reports that Jean Chrétien's (1993–2003) letters were more strategically oriented, while Stephen Harper's (2006–2015) letters took a more detailed, directive approach, featuring a “call to arms” activist style focused on a small number of core priorities. Marland (Reference Marland2016: xix, 210) argues that Trudeau's mandate letters mostly frame ministers as “brand ambassadors,” with little independent influence on the policy agenda.

Regardless of style and structure, the letters have become important internal accountability mechanisms for prime ministers as they delegate responsibilities (Wernick, Reference Wernick2021; Zussman, Reference Zussman2013). Trudeau's public release of the letters added an element of public accountability, supplemented by the mandate letter tracker on the Privy Council Office website (Privy Council Office, 2019), which kept a record of commitments met in the Liberal government's first term (2015–2019).Footnote 1 This accountability has largely been internalized, such that most ministers place great importance on their instructions and the expectations of the prime minister. As Wernick (Reference Wernick2021: 121) advises, one of the first things ministers should do is plan the implementation of their mandate letter with their political and civil service advisers. Thus, mandate letters are also a way of keeping ministerial policy ambitions in check (Savoie, Reference Savoie1999a: 324; Wernick, Reference Wernick2021). Because of this, deputy ministers aim to shape the contents of letters to protect departmental interests against deviation from ministers (Savoie, Reference Savoie1999a: 343; Zussman, Reference Zussman2013: 179–80). As mandate letters have become more detailed, ministers have less time and space to develop policy initiatives of their own (Lewis, Reference Lewis, Lewis and Everitt2017: 281). Indeed, this constraint on ministerial innovation and autonomy is the basis for Lang's (Reference Lang2022) argument that these letters undermine “cabinet government.” However, Lewis (Reference Lewis2013: 812) reports that ministers tend to believe they have “a lot” of policy influence both within and outside of their mandate letters.

While mandate letters have become established tools of prime ministerial leadership, it is important to recognize that the act of publicly releasing the letters makes Trudeau's mandate letters different in purpose to previous letters, to some extent: they serve a public relations function that previous letters did not. Thus, we cannot and do not directly compare the private, pre-2015 letters to those issued by Trudeau. Still, this additional public-oriented function complements, rather than detracts from, the fundamental use of letters as tools of centralized control; they have substantive effects on how ministers behave and reflect how prime ministers construct their policy priorities and implementation. We turn to these roles in the next section.

Prime Ministers, Ministers and Policy Co-ordination

The issuing of mandate letters by Canadian prime ministers is firmly established practice. Prime ministers find it useful to issue marching orders to ministers as a mechanism of accountability and benchmarking; they instruct ministers on what they need to accomplish and how they should do so (Wernick, Reference Wernick2021). But mandate letters may also reflect, and indeed structure, co-ordination of policy effort among ministers. Why would prime ministers use mandate letters to induce policy co-ordination among ministers? I frame the answer within the principal-agent perspective. The structuring of co-ordination among ministers is a mechanism to counteract agency loss between the prime minister as principal and ministers as agents. This characterization is a structural feature of Canada's parliamentary system, which has a chain of delegation from voters to the legislature, from the legislature to the prime minister, and from the prime minister to ministers (Strøm, Reference Strøm2000). By appointing ministers, prime ministers delegate governmental responsibilities. In so doing, they face the moral hazard problem—motivating ministers to act in the prime minister's interest once they are appointed, given imperfect capacity to monitor and/or sanction. Many prime ministerial powers, such as appointment and portfolio allocation, shuffles, centralized pressure, and cabinet committees, are framed as mechanisms to mitigate these problems (Berlinski et al., Reference Berlinski, Dewan and Dowding2010; Dewan and Hortala-Vallve, Reference Dewan and Hortala-Vallve2011; Indridason and Kam, Reference Indridason and Kam2008).

Mandate letters are one solution to the prime minister's dilemma of motivating ministers to act in the governmental, or prime ministerial, interest. This dilemma arises not so much because ministers have fixed preferences that are misaligned with the prime minister's and will try to move policy closer to their ideal point. The typical cabinet minister in Canada is a loyalist, with broad ideological commitments but rarely specific policy goals (Alexiadou, Reference Alexiadou2016). The strictness of party discipline, cabinet solidarity, and centralization of power in Canada mean that policy concerns are outweighed by desires to be a loyal team player. As Savoie (Reference Savoie1999b) argues, very few ministers will risk their careers and status to defend personal ideological or policy beliefs. He also argues that there are very few, if any, “big beasts” in modern-day Canadian cabinets: that is, ministers with independent power bases and clearly defined, strongly held beliefs (Reference Savoie2019: 198). Moreover, the relatively high turnover and shuffling rate of ministers in Canada means that ministers have little opportunity to develop policy expertise or be subject to bureaucratic capture. Indeed, policy disagreement is extremely rare: only about 10 ministers have ever resigned from federal cabinet for this reason (Heard, Reference Heard2014: 108).

Therefore, the prime minister's dilemma is less reining in policy-ambitious ministers and more co-ordinating the actions of uncertain, imperfectly informed ministers. Even if ministers share the goals of the prime minister, their work as agents will be ineffective if those goals are not clear to them. These ideas reflect work by Calvert (Reference Calvert1992), Dewan and Myatt (Reference Dewan and Myatt2008) and Landa and Tyson (Reference Landa and Tyson2017), among others, which considers the importance of political leaders in solving co-ordination problems by communicating information to followers about desired states of the world and/or introducing costs of deviation from the leader's policy goals. Mandate letters provide information about the goals and priorities of the prime minister, and they increase costs of deviation because they increase the capacity of the leader to measure and monitor compliance.

The dilemma of co-ordination also arises because most modern policy problems are crosscutting “wicked” problems that require interactive and collaborative processes across government departments and agencies (Pollitt, Reference Pollitt2003: 46). This problem has been called the “holy grail” of government and public administration because most agree on its desirability, but both its meaning and attainment have been elusive (Peters, Reference Peters2013: 569). One definition refers to “instruments and mechanisms that aim to enhance . . . the alignment of tasks and efforts” to achieve “greater coherence, reduce redundancy, lacunae, and contradictions” in decision making and policy implementation (Bouckaert et al., Reference Bouckaert, Guy Peters and Verhoest2010: 16). Similarly, Bakvis and Juillet (Reference Bakvis and Juillet2004: 8) refer to co-ordination as “the practice of aligning structures and activities to improve or facilitate the likelihood of achieving horizontal objectives, to reduce overlap and duplication, and, at a minimum, to ensure that horizontal objectives are not impeded by the actions of one or more units.” Successful policy co-ordination entails multiple actors working together to achieve shared objectives, while poor or absent co-ordination involves multiple actors working against each other, undermining shared goals. Even if ministers are well intentioned, the policy literature tells us that many modern policy issues are complex and involve crosscutting responsibilities of many public sector actors, not just one agency or department (Peters, Reference Peters2018: 2). Problems such as climate change simply cannot be addressed by the efforts of one minister or department. However, the involvement of multiple actors raises the likelihood that actors’ efforts will suffer from inconsistency, contradiction, duplication, or displacement (one actor's decision creating problems for other actors) (Peters, Reference Peters2018: 3–4). While problems of policy co-ordination are typically considered as issues of public administration, they are equally compelling for the political executive. Prime ministers must delegate tasks to ministerial agents, but these tasks are commonly in the domain of wicked policy problems, for which individual ministerial effort is insufficient and could be counterproductive when it impedes or undermines the efforts of others.

Our empirical expectations are informed by the context of Justin Trudeau's tenure as prime minister (2015–2021). The Liberal victory in 2015 was partly driven by the successful framing of Trudeau and the party as reforming across a host of arenas—the House of Commons, the Senate, the electoral system, the Supreme Court—in which Trudeau promised “real” change. Cabinet was no different, with Trudeau stating that “government by cabinet is back” (Van Dusen, Reference Van Dusen2015). Drawing a sharp contrast to Harper's centralized approach to managing ministers, the implication was that Trudeau would allow ministers greater autonomy from the centre, both in communications and in policy direction. He would allow ministers to speak and act more freely and to initiate and develop policy without interference from the centre of government. However, Savoie's skepticism (CBC News, 2015) that such reform would be enduring seems to have been justified. For many reasons—inexperienced ministers, political imperatives of message control and branding, decision-making efficiency, and policy co-ordination and implementation goals—Trudeau's “cabinet government” arguably looked much like his predecessors (Allen, Reference Allen2017; Ivison, Reference Ivison2019; Marland, Reference Marland2020). As Savoie (Reference Savoie2019: 196) concluded at the end of the first term, “if anything, we have moved further away” from cabinet government. This reading of cabinet government under Trudeau thus suggests a shift over time from emphasis on ministerial autonomy toward ministerial control. This speaks to a learning process in which both the need for centralized direction and crosscutting policy complexity became more apparent. Empirically, this leads us to posit an over-time trend in the extent to which mandate letters induce policy co-ordination. I posit that from 2015 through 2019 and the COVID-focused letters of 2021, the prime minister will instruct ministers to work increasingly collaboratively on increasingly shared policy priorities. Specifically, this means that (1) policy priorities will be increasingly shared among ministers, (2) ministers’ scope of policy activity—the tasks for which they are responsible—will broaden and (3) explicit co-ordination instructions will increase over time. In short, the mandate letters should demonstrate stronger recognition in Canada of the problems of agency loss and the necessity of policy co-ordination: problems that are of larger significance for prime ministers and political executives generally.

Data and Methodology

I use mandate letter data, topic models, and social network analysis to uncover structures of induced ministerial co-ordination. There have been four sets of cabinet-wide mandate letters released by the Trudeau government: one set each after the 2015 and 2019 elections; one set of “supplementary” letters in January 2021 (which I label “2021a”), focused on the federal COVID-19 pandemic response; and one set in December 2021, after the September election (which I label “2021b”). In total, N = 140 (30 in 2015; 36 in 2019; 36 in January 2021; and 38 in December 2021).Footnote 2 Texts of the 2019 and 2021 letters were gathered from the prime minister's official website, while older letters were collected from archived versions of that site. Mandate letters are written using a standard template in which specific tasks for each minister are sandwiched between shared instructions and advice; we extracted the unique section of each letter for analysis.

Our empirical strategy for assessing ministerial policy co-ordination is twofold. First, we uncover the policy priorities in mandate letters and measure the extent to which they are shared across ministers and, conversely, the degree of ministerial involvement in multiple policy areas. This allows us to assess the first two hypotheses: shared policy priorities and ministerial scope. Second, I examine explicit co-ordination instructions to ministers in mandate letters, in the form of directing ministers to “work with,” “support,” or otherwise pursue joint efforts. This addresses the third hypothesis of increasing co-ordination instructions over time. To determine the policy priorities embedded in the letters, I employ topic modelling. Topic models are algorithms for identifying a latent set of topics or themes from a set of texts (Isoaho et al., Reference Isoaho, Gritsenko and Mäkelä2019). Rather than predetermining categories and employing classification to allocate texts to categories, topic models simultaneously estimate latent topics and the proportions of each topic found in each document. The increasing number of applications in political science include measuring legislative agendas (Grimmer, Reference Grimmer2010; Quinn et al., Reference Quinn, Monroe, Colaresi, Crespin and Radev2010) and parliamentary speech (Curran et al., Reference Curran, Higham, Ortiz and Filho2018). I employ the most widely used algorithm for topic modelling: Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) (Grimmer and Stewart, Reference Grimmer and Stewart2013: 284). LDA assumes that each document (mandate letter here) contains a mixture of underlying topics that are theoretically common to all documents; each of these topics is a distribution over words. The algorithm estimates a posterior distribution of the latent variables of interest—the topics, overall topic proportions, and per-document topic proportions—as a function of the observed word distributions per document (Curran et al., Reference Curran, Higham, Ortiz and Filho2018; Grimmer and Stewart, Reference Grimmer and Stewart2013; for a technical description, see Blei et al., Reference Blei, Ng and Jordan2003). The first step in constructing the topic models was to preprocess each document.Footnote 3 I then proceeded to estimate the topic models using the topicmodels R package.Footnote 4 The chosen topic labels and each topic's highest probability words are included in the appendix as Table A1.Footnote 5

To examine explicit co-ordination instructions found in mandate letters, I employ social network analysis techniques, which have gained currency in political science (for overviews, see Ward et al., Reference Ward, Stovel and Sacks2011; Victor et al., Reference Victor, Montgomery and Lubell2017). The underlying ideas of social network analysis—that many phenomena in politics are relational and that the features of interest are often interactions among actors, rather than individual actors—are profound. However, network analysis concepts have yet to be applied widely in studies of executive politics. This is surprising because cabinets in Canada have developed network-like structures and purposes as they have become more institutionalized, with complex, multilayered ministerial interactions through such features as collegial budgeting processes and cabinet committees (Bernier et al., Reference Bernier, Brownsey and Howlett2005). The specific measures and methods I use are described in more detail below; here, I explain the overall application of network analysis to the mandate letter data.

The basic concepts of network analysis are the node and the tie (or edge). A node is simply an actor, such as a country or legislator; a tie is a theorized relationship between actors, such as trade flows or cosponsorship of bills. In the ministerial context, I take advantage of the fact that Trudeau's mandate letters specifically instruct ministers to work with certain other ministers. For example, the 2019 Crown–Indigenous Relations letter states that the minister should “deepen work with the Minister of Finance, working with the Minister of Indigenous Services, to establish a new fiscal relationship with Indigenous Peoples” (Trudeau, Reference Trudeau2019). Such statements explicitly induce structures of co-ordination among ministers. They communicate to ministers that many of the tasks the prime minister has set for them are not, and cannot be, accomplished individually but rather in partnerships and teams that the prime minister directs to form.

Thus, I coded all instances of such statements, which I call co-ordination ties, for all ministers and use these ties as our basis for assessing levels of induced ministerial co-ordination. Depending on the measure, I treat co-ordination ties as either directed or undirected and either binary or valued. Directed ties specify a direction—for example, “Health → International Development” specifies that the first minister should co-ordinate with the second. Undirected ties specify only the presence of a link between two nodes. In fact, the letters are not entirely symmetric: some co-ordination ties are not reciprocated. A binary tie indicates only presence or absence of one or more co-ordination ties, while a valued tie denotes strength: the number of co-ordination ties between two ministers. For example, the 2015 National Defence letter instructs the minister to work with the foreign affairs minister three separate times. Examining the co-ordination ties among ministers given in mandate letters enables us to assess how Trudeau has structured policy co-ordination at the ministerial level and, especially, whether changes over time are evident.

Mandate Letters and Ministerial Co-ordination: Analysis

This section tackles our primary research question: to what extent have Justin Trudeau's mandate letters structured ministerial policy co-ordination and how has that changed over time? To reiterate, my empirical strategy is twofold: (1) to analyze the policy priorities in mandate letters, how they are shared across ministers, and the extent to which ministerial tasks engage multiple priorities; and (2) to examine co-ordination ties in mandate letters. Figure 1 shows the results of the topic models, which uncover the latent policy priorities in the mandate letters. Specifically, the figure shows, in descending order, the overall topic proportions—the estimated proportion of words in the letters that are assigned to each topic—and thus display a relative ordering of policy priorities. In 2015, upon entering office, Trudeau's mandate letters most frequently mention climate change, trade and investment, the public service, and sport and culture as policy priorities. In 2019, the most frequent topic mention is social services, at almost 10 per cent, followed by seven policy areas with essentially equal proportions, including climate change, immigration, and the economy and taxes. Unsurprisingly, several of the most frequent topics in the January 2021 mandate letters relate to the COVID-19 pandemic, including vaccines (12 per cent), economic issues (9 per cent) and pandemic-related foreign policy issues (7 per cent). However, because this set of mandate letters was comprehensive, even if motivated by the pandemic specifically, other policy priorities are evident, including diversity in the public service and Indigenous services. Finally, in the 2021 post-election mandate letters, regional policy (essentially, federal government funding for local and regional economic development, infrastructure, and housing) comes to the fore, while employment and health care are also frequently mentioned priorities. While these results are suggestive about the relative priorities in Trudeau's delegations of responsibilities to ministers, they should not necessarily be interpreted as indicators of the overall policy priorities of the Trudeau government. A topic may be more frequently mentioned because it is of higher priority; alternatively, it may be because there are more specific, concrete tasks associated with that policy area for ministers to work on, or even that the policy area implicates ministers who require more guidance in the prime minister's view. These competing characterizations cannot be readily evaluated here, but merit future consideration.

Figure 1 Policy priorities in ministerial mandate letters, 2015–2021. Bars indicate estimated topic proportions.

More importantly, our uncovering of the relative policy priorities in ministerial mandate letters allows us to assess the extent to which policy priorities are shared among ministers and, conversely, the extent to which each mandate letter focuses on multiple policy priorities. I consider both indicators of how Trudeau's mandate letters induce co-ordination on policy priorities across ministers, though from different angles. The first is more directly a measure of policy co-ordination, while the second is a measure of ministerial scope of activity; these are related but distinct. For example, if each minister's mandate letter only concerned one policy priority but many policy priorities were shared among multiple ministers, policy co-ordination on those priorities is more likely but each minister has limited policy scope. If each minister's mandate letter concerned all policy priorities and every policy priority was the responsibility of every minister, the level of co-ordination would be maximal. These two measures are extracted from the per-document, per-topic scores: the proportion of each mandate letter assigned to each policy priority. These are visualized as heatmaps in Figures 2 and 3 for the four sets of mandate letters. Proportions are indicated by shading: a black-shaded cell indicates a proportion close to 1 (that is, the letter concerns only one policy priority), a white cell indicates proportions close to 0, and a greyscale gradient is used for intermediate values.

Figure 2 Per-document, per-topic proportions: 2015 and 2019 mandate letters.

Figure 3 Per-document, per-topic proportions: January and December 2021 mandate letters.

The results are somewhat mixed but generally support the hypothesis that the level of induced ministerial co-ordination on policy priorities has increased over time. Figure 2 shows a strikingly low level of induced policy co-ordination on both measures. On average, only 2.3 ministers are assigned to a policy priority. Two priorities, housing and energy and resources (the two least mentioned), have a single minister assigned tasks (Families, Children & Social Development and Natural Resources, respectively). The most shared policy areas are shared by only three ministers. As well, almost all 2015 mandate letters—28 of 30 (93 per cent)—focus on a single policy priority. Put another way, only 7 per cent of ministers are estimated to have tasks assigned in multiple policy priorities. In 2019, the average number of ministers assigned to a policy priority increases slightly to 2.7. More tellingly, no priorities are the domain of a single minister, and more are shared among clusters of three or more ministers (8 versus 6 in 2015). The most shared policy area, social services, is shared among four ministers. However, 35 of 36 ministerial mandate letters (97 per cent) focus on only one policy area; only one minister, Diversity, Inclusion & Youth, has tasks in multiple policy areas. These results suggest that the level of direct co-ordination over policy increased from 2015 to 2019 but that the policy scope of ministers—how wide-ranging their tasks are—did not change.

The January 2021 mandate letters, however, demonstrate significant increases in induced policy co-ordination on both measures. The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on increasing demands for policy co-ordination is clear, but the changes are not limited to pandemic-specific policy priorities. Figure 3 shows visually that the average number of ministers assigned to a policy priority is significantly higher (3.5) and that there are larger clusters of ministers assigned to several priorities. For example, the most frequent topic, Vaccines, is shared by five ministers: Health, Public Services and Procurement, Digital Government, Seniors, and International Development. Policy priorities such as Indigenous Services and Workforce Diversity are also shared by five ministers. Ministers are also more likely to be assigned tasks in multiple policy areas, with 10 of 36 now assigned to multiple policy priorities (28 per cent), significantly up from 2015 and 2019.

Finally, the December 2021 mandate letters demonstrate stronger policy co-ordination on the measure of shared policy priorities but less so as regards ministerial scope. The average number of ministers assigned to a policy priority increases from 3.5 to 3.9. The most frequently mentioned and shared policy priority—regional policy—is shared across eight ministers with varying portfolios: Rural Economic Development, Sport, Northern Affairs, Official Languages, Tourism, Housing, Diversity & Inclusion, Government House Leader, and the minister for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario. There are also large ministerial clusters in policy priorities such as health care, mitigation of climate change, climate change infrastructure, Indigenous services, and employment. However, we do not see the same pattern for ministerial scope: the percentage of ministers assigned to multiple policy priorities declines from 28 to 16 per cent. Thus, I conclude that our first expectation of increasingly shared policy priorities among cabinet ministers is supported, while the picture for our expectation of broadening policy scope for individual ministers, encompassing more policy priorities, is less clear. There is a significant increase in ministerial policy scope from 2015 and 2019 to the COVID-19 supplemental mandate letters in January 2021, but there is a decline in December 2021, although the latter level is still significantly higher than in 2015 and 2019.

Our second approach to assessing policy co-ordination in ministerial mandate letters is examination of the letters’ explicit co-ordination instructions: their “coordination ties.” Table 1 displays four measures for the four sets of mandate letters. “Density” is the number of observed ties as a proportion of all possible ties, a basic indicator of the connectedness of a network. This is calculated on the binary version of the networks, where only presence or absence of a co-ordination tie, rather than its strength, is denoted.Footnote 6 The “Avg. degree (binary)” entries indicate the mean number of co-ordination ties across ministers if considering only binary ties, while the “valued” column averages the strength of co-ordination ties across ministers. Finally, the “Clustering coefficient” is an average across ministers of the local clustering coefficient: the proportion of ties between ministers with whom a minister has ties. For example, if a minister has co-ordination ties to three ministers A, B and C, but only A and B have co-ordination ties between them, the local clustering coefficient is 0.33 (there are three possible nonreflexive ties: AB, AC and BC). Intuitively, this is a measure of how connected each minister's local network is; averaged over the network, it indicates how strongly the network structures groups of connected ministers.

Table 1 Network Statistics for Mandate Letter Networks, 2015–2021

These overall network measures tell a consistent story: over the period 2015 to 2021, through four sets of mandate letters, Trudeau has sought to induce increasing policy co-ordination among cabinet ministers. In 2015, 20 per cent of all possible ties between ministers were observed. The 2019 density is the same, but both 2021 mandate letters demonstrate higher density scores, increasing to 23 per cent of possible co-ordination ties in January 2021 and 27 per cent after the 2021 election. While density is only significantly different in 2021, relative to 2015, it should be noted that the number of possible ties in a network typically increases faster than the number of actual ties, since n + 1 nodes increases the possible edges by n: density will decrease unless each additional tie increases the average number of ties by n/(n − 1). Thus, densities are “almost always lower in large networks than in small networks” (Borgatti et al., Reference Borgatti, Everett and Johnson2018: 175). The density value for 2019, then, should not be interpreted as indicating a less connected network compared to 2015. Indeed, the trend of increasing connectedness is clear if we consider the average number and strength of co-ordination ties (degree) of individual ministers. For the binary measure indicating only presence or absence of a tie, ministers in 2015 are instructed to work with an average of 5.77 other ministers; this rises to 6.69 in 2019, 7.94 in January 2021, and 9.84 in December 2021. This difference over time is statistically significant under a one-way ANOVA test (F(3,136) = 6.97, p = 0.00). Put another way: in 2015, ministers were only instructed to co-ordinate on policy efforts with 20 per cent of cabinet; by 2021, this rises to 27 per cent. We see the same increasing trend when considering the strength of co-ordination ties, not just their presence or absence (“avg. degree (valued)” in Table 1). In 2015, the average minister was mandated by their mandate letter to co-ordinate policy efforts with other ministers 8.53 times. This increases to 9.19 times in 2019, 11.44 times in January 2021, and 14.11 times in December 2021.Footnote 7 This change is also statistically significant (F(3,136) = 4.76, p = 0.00). As Trudeau's tenure continues, the mandate letters demonstrate that ministers are increasingly being instructed explicitly to work with and support more of their colleagues and in more of their delegated tasks.

The clustering coefficient measure also supports the narrative of increasing co-ordination over time in Trudeau's mandate letters. This measure begins at 0.20, indicating that in 2015, on average, a minister's local network (the ministers with whom they have ties) has only one-fifth of the possible ties among them. In 2019, the clustering coefficient increases to 0.28, then to 0.38 in January 2021, and finally to 0.40 in December 2021. There are twice as many ties in the average minister's local network at the end of 2021, relative to Trudeau's first mandate letters in 2015. Over time, then, Canadian cabinet ministers under Trudeau are more likely to have local networks that are more strongly connected; clusters of ministers who are all directly connected to each other (called cliques) are more likely to arise over time. Indeed, this can be measured directly by counting the number of cliques for all node groups of two or greater (called a clique census). In 2015, there are only 40 ministerial clusters with maximal direct connections.Footnote 8 The 2019 mandate letters construct 54 such clusters, jumping to 63 in January 2021, including two 6-minister cliques for the first time. Finally, I find 79 cliques in the December 2021 letters, a twofold increase over 2015. This observation is reinforced by examining a related measure, the triad census, which counts occurrences of all possible configurations of three nodes in a network (Borgatti et al., Reference Borgatti, Everett and Johnson2018: 182). We focus on two configurations that most demonstrate clusters of co-ordinated ministers: the triad A↔ B ↔ C, meaning that there are mutual ties between A and B and B and C, suggesting B as a “lead” minister, and A ↔ B ↔ C, A ↔ C, three ministers with all mutual ties. Occurrences of the first configuration number 183 in 2015, 322 in 2019, 753 in January 2021, and 945 in December 2021. Occurrences of the second configuration number 29 in 2015, 54 in 2019, 153 in January 2021, and 210 in December 2021. These measures strongly support the hypothesis that explicit inducements of ministers to co-ordinate policy effort increase during Justin Trudeau's tenure.

Discussion and Conclusion

Mandate letters are important documents provided to Canadian ministers by the prime minister and subnational executives but have yet to receive systematic scholarly investigation. This article begins to fill that gap by examining mandate letters as mechanisms of co-ordination among ministers. I hypothesized that analysis of Justin Trudeau's mandate letters from 2015 to 2021 would show that policy priorities are increasingly shared across ministers, that ministers’ scope of policy activity would broaden, and that explicit instructions to co-ordinate would increase over time. Empirical analysis revealed reasonably consistent evidence that policy priorities in mandate letters have become increasingly shared among ministers over time, demonstrated by growth in the average number of ministers assigned to policy priorities and larger clusters of ministers for the most frequently discussed priorities. Evidence for broadening ministerial scope was more mixed: the COVID-focused January 2021 mandate letters showed a significant increase in scope from 2015 and 2019, measured as the share of ministers with tasks in multiple priorities, but this share declined in the December 2021 letters, if still higher than previously. Finally, the hypothesis that explicit co-ordination instructions to ministers would increase was consistently supported on several distinct measures. Ministers had more and stronger co-ordination ties and were more likely to be members of locally connected clusters of ministers, such as cliques and triads with mutual co-ordination ties.

Overall, then, our analysis demonstrates that mandate letters are not simply instructions to individual ministers, working autonomously. Rather, they can and have been used to induce co-ordination of ministerial policy effort to address the fundamental agency problem facing prime ministers and other chief executives. Like many new leaders, Trudeau entered office promising greater ministerial autonomy and a “return” to cabinet government. Our results suggest that the imperatives of coherent, strategic governance and cross-government policy co-ordination make such promises difficult to keep; they may also suggest that Trudeau did not sufficiently account for the complexity of governing in earlier periods and has learned the importance of co-ordinated effort to meet that complexity over time. They also speak to broader debates about centralization of power in Canada and the erosion of cabinet government by an overly powerful prime minister and central agencies. While this article takes no position on the normative aspects of these debates, it suggests that prime ministers are increasingly adept at employing mechanisms of control that do not require constant engagement and oversight. Donald Savoie's (Reference Savoie1999a: 336) view that prime ministers have limited time and resources and thus typically should “govern by bolts of lightning”—that is, by focusing on and driving through priorities and well-timed interventions—remains true. But the explicit effort in mandate letters to dictate the substance and process of ministerial policy making suggests that prime ministers and the centre of government need not rely on active intervention to enforce centralized decisions; rather, they can construct ministerial roles from the outset and allow ministers the autonomy of being accountable for their performance relative to these roles.

Any comparison of Trudeau's cabinets and change over time encounters the problem of COVID-19, which reached political salience in early 2020 and continued to dominate governmental policy making at all levels for at least three years after. The federal government was called upon to produce dramatic, unprecedented economic supports, constrict international movement, disseminate public health information, frame the crisis for the Canadian public, and manage protective equipment and vaccine distribution in a complex federal system (Turnbull and Bernier, Reference Turnbull and Bernier2022; Paquet and Schertzer, Reference Paquet and Schertzer2020). The pandemic thus necessitated crisis and emergency modes of governance, which tend to reduce executive accountability to legislatures and encourage executive aggrandizement (Bolleyer and Salát, Reference Bolleyer and Salát2021; Brock, Reference Brock2022; Gidengil et al., Reference Gidengil, Stolle and Bergeron-Boutin2022; Turnbull and Bernier, Reference Turnbull and Bernier2022). As Turnbull and Bernier (Reference Turnbull and Bernier2022) argue, a virtue of the Canadian Westminster executive in periods of crisis governance is its flexibility and inherent centralization. The federal executive was able to quickly implement procedural changes within cabinet decision making, such as the COVID-19 cabinet committee, without obstruction. Similarly, the pandemic provided both opportunity and institutional adaptability to further entrench horizontal co-ordination of ministerial activity as a tool of centralized control, with Trudeau significantly reshaping and strengthening co-ordination among ministers in January and December 2021 to focus efforts on pandemic response. The enormity of the COVID-19 crisis, and the uncertainty and chaos of its policy-making environment, also generated a need for stronger co-ordination and for effective delegation and allocation of ministerial work (Turnbull, Reference Turnbull2020: 36). Thus, one clear implication of this study is that future crises should have a similar effect of enabling and incentivizing prime ministers to induce co-ordination within the political executive.

While these findings represent an initial assessment of mandate letters as key aspects of policy making, executive politics and prime ministerial leadership, they are promising for future research. For example, does executive-level co-ordination matter substantively? Are more strongly co-ordinated cabinets more (or less) effective than more weakly co-ordinated cabinets? Do they produce different outputs? Given that Canadian prime ministers seem constantly to effect cabinet and machinery of government change, it is plausible that such changes do matter. Measuring the impacts of co-ordination is difficult given that cabinet-level mandates are only one moving part out of many in government and the broader political context. Still, more qualitative analysis informed by firsthand participant accounts would be a step in answering these questions.

Other avenues suggest themselves. First, there is much more fine-grained, detailed work to be done investigating collaboration and co-ordination relationships in cabinets. Which ministers are more and less integrated into these networks, and why? How does mandate letter co-ordination map onto other mechanisms of cabinet management, such as cabinet committee membership? Second, comparing Justin Trudeau's mandate letters to those of previous prime ministers, provincial premiers, or the charter letters issued in Australia could greatly illuminate and contribute to a broader theorization of the role of such mechanisms. Finally, this article focuses on the text of mandate letters as input into co-ordination relationships among ministers. It does not go beyond that to examine how mandate letters are used in practice, in everyday cabinet decision making and relationships between first ministers and ministers. How often, and how, do prime ministers use mandate letters in interactions with ministers? Mandate letters are a distinctive form of executive management: students of executive politics and policy making in Canada and elsewhere could learn much from them.

Competing Interests

The author declares none.

Appendix

Table A1 Topic Labels and Most Frequent Words by Topic

Footnotes

1 The tracker indicates that 288 of 432 first-term commitments (68 per cent) were “fully met” as of June 20, 2019. The tracker has not been updated since.

2 New mandate letters have also been issued during terms upon significant cabinet reshuffles: 4 in 2016, 12 in 2017, and 10 in 2018. These were collected but not used in analysis.

3 This involved removing punctuation, numbers, common English “stopwords,” and several high-frequency word stems with low information content. These were: minist, canada, canadian, nation, will, govern, work, support, develop, continu, includ, implement, ensur.

4 The number of topics, which is not estimated but assumed, was assessed using topic coherence. Topics should consist of reasonably similar words and be distinguishable: topic coherence is a measure of how well the words in a topic, for a given number of topics, fit together in terms of co-occurrence. That is, a coherence score measures how likely the words in a topic will occur together (see Röder et al., Reference Röder, Both and Hinneburg2015). Calculating coherence scores for 2 to 15 topics showed that the highest coherence was obtained for 14 topics for the 2015, 2019, and January 2021 mandate letters. The December 2021 mandate letters’ maximum coherence was at 9 topics, but for comparative purposes, the 5-topic difference was too large. Thus, I chose a 12-topic model for the last set of letters, as it obtains the second-highest coherence score and is significantly more comparable.

5 The topic labels are the author's interpretation of the topic, based on the highest probability words. For example, the energy and resources topic for 2015 was based on the words: resourc, energi, environment, clean, natur, technolog, innov, invest, opportun, science.

6 Density on a valued network is defined as the average strength of ties, since the value for “all possible ties” is unclear. I give the average strength of ties in the “Avg. Degree (Valued)” column.

7 The mandate letters vary in length. The average 2015 mandate letter is 404 words; in 2019, 514 words; in January 2021, 315 words; in December 2021, 757 words. If adjusted for length, the trend disappears. However, there is no reason to adjust for length given that it is itself a telling feature: the increasing average length suggests that, over time, Trudeau has become more explicit and detailed in his instructions to ministers (the January 2021 letters depart from the trend, but they are midterm letters focused on COVID-19 response, not post-election letters advancing a comprehensive policy platform).

8 Cliques were calculated on the binary, directed version of the networks, but the binary, undirected counts show similar results. There is no standard definition of cliques for valued edges.

References

Alexiadou, Despina. 2016. Ideologues, Partisans, and Loyalists: Ministers and Policymaking in Parliamentary Cabinets. Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allen, Samantha Wright. 2017. “Trudeau PMO Tightening Control over Ministerial Staffing, ‘Identical’ to Harper Approach, Says Ex-Liberal MP.” Hill Times, October 25. https://www.hilltimes.com/2017/10/25/trudeau-pmo-centralizes-power-just-like-harper-critics/123427.Google Scholar
Bakvis, Herman and Juillet, Luc. 2004. The Horizontal Challenge: Line Departments, Central Agencies and Leadership. Ottawa, Ontario: Canada School of Public Service.Google Scholar
Berlinski, Samuel, Dewan, Torun and Dowding, Keith. 2010. “The Impact of Individual and Collective Performance on Ministerial Tenure.” Journal of Politics 72 (2): 559–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bernier, Luc, Brownsey, Keith and Howlett, Michael, eds. 2005. Executive Styles in Canada: Cabinet Structure and Leadership Practices in Canadian Government. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blei, David M., Ng, Andrew Y. and Jordan, Michael I.. 2003. “Latent Dirichlet Allocation.” Journal of Machine Learning Research 3: 9931022.Google Scholar
Bolleyer, Nicole and Salát, Orsolya. 2021. “Parliaments in Times of Crisis: COVID-19, Populism and Executive Dominance.” West European Politics 44 (5–6): 1103–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Borgatti, Stephen P., Everett, Martin G. and Johnson, Jeffrey C.. 2018. Analyzing Social Networks. Los Angeles: Sage.Google Scholar
Bouckaert, Geert, Guy Peters, B. and Verhoest, Koen. 2010. “Coordination: What Is It and Why Should We Have It?” In The Coordination of Public Sector Organizations. London: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brock, Kathy. 2022. “Executive-Parliamentary Relations in Canada: Moving Forward from the Pandemic.” Canadian Public Administration 65 (3): 497515.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brodie, Ian. 2018. At the Centre of Government: The Prime Minister and the Limits on Political Power. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Calvert, Randall. 1992. “Leadership and Its Basis in Problems of Social Coordination.” International Political Science Review 13 (1): 724.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
CBC News. 2015. “Donald Savoie: Government by Cabinet Will Be a ‘Major Challenge.’” November 6. https://www.cbc.ca/radio/thehouse/meet-your-new-government-1.3305229/donald-savoie-government-by-cabinet-will-be-a-major-challenge-1.3307747.Google Scholar
Curran, Ben, Higham, Kyle, Ortiz, Elisenda and Filho, Demival Vasques. 2018. “Look Who's Talking: Two-Mode Networks as Representations of a Topic Model of New Zealand Parliamentary Speeches.” PloS One 13 (6): e0199072.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dewan, Torun and Hortala-Vallve, Rafael. 2011. “The Three As of Government Formation: Appointment, Allocation, and Assignment.” American Journal of Political Science 55 (3): 610–27.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dewan, Torun and Myatt, David P.. 2008. “The Qualities of Leadership: Direction, Communication, and Obfuscation.” American Political Science Review 102 (3): 351–68.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gidengil, Elisabeth, Stolle, Dietlind and Bergeron-Boutin, Olivier. 2022. “COVID-19 and Support for Executive Aggrandizement.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 55 (2): 342–72.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grimmer, Justin. 2010. “A Bayesian Hierarchical Topic Model for Political Texts: Measuring Expressed Agendas in Senate Press Releases.” Political Analysis 18 (1): 135.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grimmer, Justin and Stewart, Brandon M.. 2013. “Text as Data: The Promise and Pitfalls of Automatic Content Analysis Methods for Political Texts.” Political Analysis 21 (3): 267–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heard, Andrew. 2014. Canadian Constitutional Conventions: The Marriage of Law and Politics. Don Mills: Oxford University Press Canada.Google Scholar
Indridason, Indridi H. and Kam, Christopher. 2008. “Cabinet Reshuffles and Ministerial Drift.” British Journal of Political Science 38 (4): 621–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Isoaho, Karoliina, Gritsenko, Daria and Mäkelä, Eetu. 2019. “Topic Modeling and Text Analysis for Qualitative Policy Research.” Policy Studies Journal 49 (1): 300–24.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ivison, John. 2019. Trudeau: The Education of a Prime Minister. Toronto: Signal.Google Scholar
Landa, Dimitri and Tyson, Scott A.. 2017. “Coercive Leadership.” American Journal of Political Science 61 (3): 559–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lang, Eugene. 2022. “Ministerial Mandate Letters: Another Nail in the Coffin of Cabinet Government.” Policy Options, February 15. https://policyoptions.irpp.org/magazines/february-2022/ministerial-mandate-letters-another-nail-in-the-coffin-of-cabinet-government/.Google Scholar
Lewis, J. P. 2013. “Elite Attitudes on the Centralization of Power in Canadian Political Executives: A Survey of Former Canadian Provincial and Federal Cabinet Ministers, 2000–2010.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 46 (4): 799819.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lewis, J. P. 2017. “A Wolf in Wolf's Clothing: The Stephen Harper Ministry.” In The Blueprint: Conservative Parties and Their Impact on Canadian Politics, ed. Lewis, J. P. and Everitt, Joanna. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. https://doi.org/10.3138/9781487514020-012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marland, Alex. 2016. Brand Command: Canadian Politics and Democracy in the Age of Message Control. Vancouver: UBC Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marland, Alex. 2020. Whipped: Party Discipline in Canada. Vancouver: UBC Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McParland, Kelly. 2019. “Mandate Letters Make for Great Virtue Signalling.” National Post, December 16. https://nationalpost.com/opinion/kelly-mcparland-mandate-letters-make-for-great-virtue-signalling.Google Scholar
Paquet, Mireille and Schertzer, Robert. 2020. “COVID-19 as a Complex Intergovernmental Problem.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 53 (2): 343–47.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peters, B. Guy. 2013. “Toward Policy Coordination: Alternatives to Hierarchy.” Policy & Politics 41 (4): 569–84.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peters, B. Guy. 2018. “The Challenge of Policy Coordination.” Policy Design and Practice 1 (1): 111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pollitt, Christopher. 2003. “Joined-Up Government: A Survey.” Political Studies Review 1 (1): 3449.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Privy Council Office. 2019. “Mandate Letter Tracker: Delivering Results for All Canadians.” https://www.canada.ca/en/privy-council/campaigns/mandate-tracker-results-canadians.html.Google Scholar
Quinn, Kevin M., Monroe, Burt L., Colaresi, Michael, Crespin, Michael H. and Radev, Dragomir R.. 2010. “How to Analyze Political Attention with Minimal Assumptions and Costs.” American Journal of Political Science 54 (1): 209–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Röder, Michael, Both, Andreas and Hinneburg, Alexander. 2015. “Exploring the Space of Topic Coherence Measures.” In WSDM 2015: Proceedings of the Eighth ACM International Conference on Web Search and Data Mining. New York: Association for Computing Machinery.Google Scholar
Savoie, Donald J. 1999a. Governing from the Centre: The Concentration of Power in Canadian Politics. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Savoie, Donald J. 1999b. “The Rise of Court Government in Canada.” Canadian Journal of Political Science 32 (4): 635–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Savoie, Donald J. 2019. Democracy in Canada: The Disintegration of Our Institutions. Montreal and Kingston: McGill-Queen's University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strøm, Kaare. 2000. “Delegation and Accountability in Parliamentary Democracies.” European Journal of Political Research 37 (3): 261–90.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trudeau, Justin. 2019. “Minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations Mandate Letter.” Prime Minister of Canada. https://www.pm.gc.ca/en/mandate-letters/2019/12/13/archived-minister-crown-indigenous-relations-mandate-letter.Google Scholar
Turnbull, Lori. 2020. “COVID-19, Cabinet, and Central Agencies.” In The Impact of COVID-19 on the Future of Governance in Canada. COVID-19 Governance Working Group, Queen's University School of Policy Studies. https://policycommons.net/artifacts/2079517/the-impact-of-covid-19-on-the-future-of-governance-in-canada/2834815/.Google Scholar
Turnbull, Lori and Bernier, Luc. 2022. “Executive Decision-Making during the COVID-19 Emergency Period.” Canadian Public Administration 65 (3): 538–46.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Van Dusen, Lisa. 2015. “‘Government by Cabinet Is Back’: Trudeau, Ministers Sworn in at Rideau Hall.” iPolitics, November 4. https://ipolitics.ca/2015/11/04/crowds-gather-to-watch-justin-trudeau-and-cabinet-sworn-in-at-rideau-hall/.Google Scholar
Victor, Jennifer Nicoll, Montgomery, Alexander H. and Lubell, Mark, eds. 2017. The Oxford Handbook of Political Networks. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Ward, Michael D., Stovel, Katherine and Sacks, Audrey. 2011. “Network Analysis and Political Science.” Annual Review of Political Science 14: 245–64.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Weller, Patrick. 2007. Cabinet Government in Australia, 1901–2006: Practice, Principles, Performance. Sydney: University of New South Wales Press.Google Scholar
Wells, Paul. 2020. “Canada Would Like a Government Now, Please.” Maclean's, January 8. https://www.macleans.ca/politics/ottawa/canada-would-like-a-government-now-please/.Google Scholar
Wernick, Michael. 2021. Governing Canada: A Guide to the Tradecraft of Politics. Vancouver: On Point Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zussman, David. 2013. Off and Running: The Prospects and Pitfalls of Government Transitions in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1 Policy priorities in ministerial mandate letters, 2015–2021. Bars indicate estimated topic proportions.

Figure 1

Figure 2 Per-document, per-topic proportions: 2015 and 2019 mandate letters.

Figure 2

Figure 3 Per-document, per-topic proportions: January and December 2021 mandate letters.

Figure 3

Table 1 Network Statistics for Mandate Letter Networks, 2015–2021

Figure 4

Table A1 Topic Labels and Most Frequent Words by Topic