This Thursday on The Brian Crombie Hour, Brian sits down with Eugene Lang — former senior federal official and professor at Queen’s University — for a candid conversation about one of Canada’s biggest and least discussed challenges:
Why does Canada struggle to execute, even when it knows exactly what needs to be done?
The problem, Lang argues, is not a lack of ideas or strategy.
It’s the institutions responsible for delivering results.
Together, Brian and Eugene examine the growing gap between ambitious political agendas — particularly under Prime Minister Mark Carney — and the federal government’s ability to implement meaningful change.
The discussion explores three major structural barriers inside Ottawa:
- A deeply embedded culture of risk aversion
- Canada’s long-standing dependence on the United States
- And an institutional discomfort with industrial policy and economic strategy
Even when leadership wants to move quickly, the system itself often resists change.
The conversation also turns to Canada’s increasingly fragile relationship with the United States. Brian and Eugene discuss the risks of over-reliance on American trade, why diversification has remained more rhetoric than reality, and whether current geopolitical tensions signal a permanent shift in the relationship.
Finally, they explore whether meaningful reform is possible.
Can Canada modernize its institutions to compete in a rapidly changing world?
Potential solutions include reducing bureaucratic layers, bringing more private-sector experience into government, and fundamentally rethinking how public institutions approach risk, decision-making, and execution.
Because strategy without delivery is not leadership.
And in a world moving faster than ever — economically, technologically, and geopolitically — countries that cannot execute may struggle to compete at all.