Former Harper aide Brodie recalls ‘NAFTA-gate’ scandal as Canada navigates Trump
OTTAWA — Ian Brodie has been waiting a decade to tell his side of the political story that was known as NAFTA-gate.
In 2008, Brodie was the circumspect chief of staff to then-prime minister Stephen Harper when his casual conversation in a budget lock-up with a reporter set off a chain of events that led to a full-blown political tempest that temporarily upended Barack Obama’s march to the White House.
It led to an internal government investigation, upheaval in the Prime Minister’s Office and raised fears about something that is now a major source of continental angst — the possibility of the United States torching the North American Free Trade Agreement.
Brodie, now a University of Calgary political scientist, revisits the 2008 political drama in his new book on the role of the PMO in Canada’s political system, “At The Centre of Government: The Prime Minister and the Limits of Political Power.”