I created this site in 2020 as a place to share ideas and perspectives shaped by a long career in public policy, strategic planning, communications, association management, government, and politics.
When I launched it, I did not fully appreciate how constraining to self-expression it could be to work within Ottawa’s mainstream policy and institutional ecosystem.
Writing carefully, moderating tone and always colouring within the lines may be necessary, even appropriate, but over time it is also limiting. That is why this site did not become the safe place for unvarnished expression I had hoped it would be.
As I write this, I’m in a different place, I’ve left full-time association management and have moved to a different stage of my professional life: One where I can choose, who I work with, what projects I lend my time to and the causes I advocate for.
And with that, I’m reclaiming my own voice — the ability to write and think freely, without the need for perpetual moderation and compromise. This site now reflects that intention more clearly.
I still expect to post the occasional quick take on breaking news, but the emphasis will remain on more considered opinion and longer-form analysis, written honestly and in my own voice.
While the news cycle will shape some of what appears here, my focus will increasingly be on a smaller number of issues of particular concern to me: governance and leadership, mental health and wellbeing in institutional settings, public policy and democratic practice, and the human consequences of how we design and manage our institutions.
And from time to time, I may still share thoughts on a book or two that have little — or nothing at all — to do with public policy.
This site is, at its core, a place to think out loud — freely, honestly, and for me, in a reclaimed voice.
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As a result of yesterday’s election, the coming months may offer an extraordinary teachable moment: a real-time look at what it takes to dismantle institutions that have been reshaped over years to serve personal political interests. In that sense, Hungary may provide an early glimpse of the kind of transition other democracies — including the United States — could one day face.
For more than a decade, Orbán positioned himself as one of the leading architects of an alternative to liberal democracy. Within the European Union, he repeatedly blocked collective action, including support for Ukraine. At home, he made opposition to immigration a defining political axis, reshaping public debate well beyond Hungary’s borders. Abroad, he cultivated ties with Moscow while aligning himself closely with the American right, presenting himself as a model for Trump-era politics.
His election loss, unthinkable a year ago, therefore, carries meaning far beyond Hungary. But the core question remains: Elections remove leaders, they do not on their own transform the systems that sustained them.
In Hungary, that system became deeply embedded over time through constitutional changes, media consolidation, and the development of dense political and economic patronage networks.
What is often described as “Orbanism” is not simply a political movement. It became an architecture of power, built deliberately and designed to endure.
There are clear parallels beyond Hungary. Comparisons between Orban’s Hungary and the United States under Donald Trump are not just about political affinity. They reflect a similar approach to power, one that bends state institutions to personal ends, running roughshod over established norms.
This is why this moment matters and why the real test begins now.
Hungary is entering a phase that is far more complex than the election itself. The incoming prime minister, Péter Magyar, is not an outsider, he is a former insider who broke with Orban’s regime. As such he may be better positioned than most for the massive challenge ahead.
A fully functioning liberal system after years of eroded norms and weakened checks and balances cannot be restored by government decree. Institutions do not reset on their own. And the ecosystem of interests — political, economic, media, institutional — that formed around the regime does not dissolve with the defeat of its patron.
This is what makes Hungary a test case. Not simply for the defeat of an illiberal leader, but for what comes next.
Orban was not operating in isolation. He was part of a broader transnational network linking figures as varied as Donald Trump, Marine Le Pen, and Vladimir Putin. Yet that alignment did not protect him at the ballot box. The internationalization of illiberalism, it turns out, does not guarantee its durability.
That reality complicates a broader narrative that has taken hold in recent years: that the liberal democratic order is in irreversible decline. There is truth in that diagnosis. The vulnerabilities exposed over the past decade are real.
But Hungary points to something more nuanced and more historically relevant.
Democracies are not static systems. They absorb pressure. They bend. At times, they drift far from their own norms. But they also retain the capacity to course correct.
Recent developments — in Hungary, but also earlier in Poland and Brazil — suggest that such corrections are possible. They may be incomplete, fragile, and even reversible. But they are real enough to challenge the idea that democratic systems are simply on a one-way road to decline.
None of this means that liberal democracy is emerging strengthened from this period. It is not. But it does suggest that it is not as easily displaced as some have argued.
For observers beyond Hungary, the stakes go well beyond one election. The question is no longer whether systems like Orban’s can be defeated. It is whether they can be unwound.
The answer will take time. But it may offer valuable insight into the kinds of challenges other democracies will face.
Because while the fall of a leader is visible, the traps he leaves behind for his successor are not.
And that may be the true significance of this moment — not what it closes, but what it opens: a difficult, uncertain, but instructive process of political and institutional course correction.
What happens when the boss burns out? In Canada’s nonprofit sector, that question matters more than we are prepared to admit. A 2024 YMCA not-for-profit organizations survey found that 71 percent of sector leaders experienced burnout.
Many of these organizations depend on their chief executive to do more than manage operations. They are entrusted with legal, administrative and fiduciary responsibilities. They are the public face of the organization and are responsible for staff wellbeing, organizational performance and mission delivery. They are expected to hold the organization together.
And they often do so under conditions that make that task unsustainable.
In many nonprofits, boards set direction but do not consistently provide clarity, alignment or ongoing support. Expectations shift. Resources lag behind ambition. Governance boundaries blur.
The result is that the chief executive becomes the one who fills the gap. They take on additional responsibilities. They compensate for weak alignment. They manage tensions between mission, resources and expectations. They protect staff from the instability above them while maintaining performance outwardly.
And often, they do this without clear direction, adequate resources or meaningful feedback.
This is the precursor to burnout.
And it raises a harder question: What happens when the mental health of the person responsible for protecting the organization — and its staff — begins to fray?
Workplace mental health has become a mainstream concern. Organizations speak the language of psychological safety. Policies reference wellbeing. Leaders are encouraged to champion work-life balance.
But there is a quiet exception — the chief executive.
In many nonprofits, the CEO is the only employee reporting directly to the board. They have no internal escalation path. Their support structure is informal at best. Their accountability is immediate and concentrated.
They are, in effect, the invisible employee in workplace mental health frameworks.
This invisibility is structural.
Statutes impose duties of workplace care, diligence and good faith. By virtue of their role, the chief executive is expected to understand what those terms mean and how to operationalize them.
But the current federal law says almost nothing about the board’s responsibility for executive wellbeing — how to recognize distress, how to respond, or when to intervene.
The result is ambiguity where there should be none.
In practice, the pattern is familiar: a chief executive begins to experience strain — gradually, often invisibly. The causes are rarely singular: sustained workload, chronic financial pressures, unclear governance boundaries or direction, competing demands, isolation at the top.
Over time, pressure accumulates. Performance may shift. Communication with staff, board or external stakeholders may change. Workplace behaviour may become sharper or less filtered.
From the inside, this is a system under wholly predictable strain. From the outside, it is often read as a performance problem — or a conduct issue.
In many organizations, that is the pivot point. Once framed that way, the system moves quickly. Procedures are triggered. Communications are formalized. Decisions are made.
What rarely happens is inquiry.
What changed? What pressures were present? What signals were missed? What role did governance play?
This is not simply a failure of compassion. It is a failure of governance.
It also reflects a deeper assumption that runs through many workplaces: that performance and wellbeing are primarily the responsibility of the individual. When strain becomes visible, the focus shifts to the person rather than to the conditions that produced it.
In that context, workplace distress is interpreted as a failure to cope rather than as a signal of systemic dysfunction. The individual becomes the problem to be managed.
That is how organizations begin to treat people as interchangeable, and, ultimately, as disposable.
Too often, leadership breakdowns are attributed to individual weakness. In reality, they are often the product of systems that fail to align expectations with resources, blur the line between oversight and management, and leave the chief executive to reconcile contradictions they did not create.
In those systems, the CEO becomes both the focal point of accountability and the least protected participant.
The consequences extend beyond the individual.
When executive burnout is mishandled, organizations lose continuity and institutional knowledge. Strategy stalls. Staff morale deteriorates. And critically, the protective buffer between governance failure and staff wellbeing begins to erode.
That erosion is not abstract. In many organizations, the chief executive functions as the buffer between governance and staff, translating direction, moderating pressure and maintaining basic workplace norms. As long as that buffer holds, governance failures are partially contained.
When it breaks, the effect is immediate. Expectations become unstable, pressure increases and the underlying misalignment is felt across the organization. What was once absorbed at the top is transferred downward.
The irony is that the chief executive is often held responsible for the resulting deterioration in the workplace — even when the conditions that produced it were created at the governance level.
These failures rarely surface. They are resolved quietly through resignation, settlement or separation. The underlying causes remain.
The law offers little help. Courts can assess conduct and award damages after the fact. But they cannot repair psychological harm once it has occurred. The damage is already done.
It is, in the simplest terms, a toothpaste problem. Once it’s out of the tube, you cannot put it back.
This is why the conversation needs to change.
In the nonprofit sector, workplace mental health cannot be treated solely as an employee issue. It is a governance issue.
And at the top of the organizational pyramid, it is a board responsibility.
That does not mean boards become clinicians. It means they recognize executive wellbeing as a condition of organizational health, align clear expectations with resources, and understand that leadership sustainability is not optional.
Organizations that get this right tend to get other things right as well. They understand that performance is not only what gets delivered, but how and at what cost. They get the job done and deliver value for their members and their funders.
In those organizations, mental health is not a separate conversation. It is part of governance. It is part of board leadership and accountability.
So again: What happens when the boss burns out?
In too many nonprofit organizations, nothing until something breaks. And by then, the system has already failed the very people it depends on.