A Public Purpose - Tom Kent - Books - McGill-Queen's University Press - 9780773506497 - May 1, 1988
In case cover and title do not match, the title is correct

A Public Purpose


Get an email once the item is available
Do you have a profile? Log in
Add to your iMusic wish list

From 1951 to 1971, Tom Kent was successively Assistant Editor of The Economist; Editor of the Winnipeg Free Press, confidant, adviser, and speechwriter to Opposition Leader Lester B. Pearson; leading light at the Kingston conference of 1960; policy consultant to the Liberal Party of Canada; candidate for Parliament against Tommy Douglas; Co-ordinator of Progamming (i.e., right-hand-man) in Pearson's PMO; Deputy Minister under Jean Marchand at Employment and Immigration; and first Deputy Minister, also under Marchand, at the new Department of Regional Economic Expansion. A Public Purpose is an account of Kent's experience as a central figure in the life of one of the most important governments of the last half century, and an agenda for unfinished business, suggesting policies for the present. His views on the events in which he was involved are strong and often unorthodox, but always consistent in their theme that politics should be conducted neither technocratically nor according to imperatives imposed by interest groups and the pork barrel. Instead, he argues, political parties should tell the people what they intend to do when they get into office and, once elected, should do it.


464 pages

Media Books     Hardcover Book   (Book with hard spine and cover)
Released May 1, 1988
ISBN13 9780773506497
Publishers McGill-Queen's University Press
Pages 464
Dimensions 150 × 220 × 20 mm   ·   802 g   (Weight (estimated))
Language English  

More by Tom Kent

Show all

Mere med samme udgiver