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Bullboard - Stock Discussion Forum BCE Inc T.BCE.PR.K


Primary Symbol: T.BCE Alternate Symbol(s):  BCE | T.BCE.PR.A | BCPPF | T.BCE.PR.B | T.BCE.PR.C | BCEPF | T.BCE.PR.D | T.BCE.PR.E | BCAEF | T.BCE.PR.F | T.BCE.PR.G | BECEF | T.BCE.PR.H | T.BCE.PR.I | T.BCE.PR.J | BCEXF | T.BCE.PR.M | T.BCE.PR.N | T.BCE.PR.Q | T.BCE.PR.R | BCEIF | T.BCE.PR.S | T.BCE.PR.T | T.BCE.PR.Y | BCEFF | T.BCE.PR.Z | T.BCE.PR.L

BCE Inc. is a Canada-based communications company. The Company provides wireless and fiber networks. The Company operates through one segment: Bell Communication and Technology Services (Bell CTS). Bell CTS segment provides a range of communication products and services to consumers, businesses and government customers across Canada. Its wireless products and services include mobile data and... see more

TSX:BCE - Post Discussion

BCE Inc > Attack Dog to Leader?
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Post by Dibah420 on Oct 01, 2024 9:07am

Attack Dog to Leader?

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This fall, Tory Leader Pierre Poilievre plans to start meeting with CEOs in what will often be his first face-to-face encounters with the people who run Canadian companies.ADRIAN WYLD/THE CANADIAN PRESS

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When Pierre Poilievre banged on doors this summer during a Toronto by-election, the Conservative Leader was told to move on from slagging Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and start talking about how he planned to do a better job of running the country.

Mr. Poilievre appears to have internalized part of the message.

Last week, he moved to slagging Mirko Bibic, chief executive officer of Bell parent BCE Inc. BCE-T, with all the vile and vitriol previously reserved for the Liberal Leader. If personally taunting the CEO of the country’s largest telecom platform over a sloppy audio edit at Bell-owned CTV News is an indication of how Mr. Poilievre plans to work with corporate leaders, buckle up ahead of a rough economic ride.

In business circles, there are well-founded concerns the prime minister-in-waiting lacks the common sense and self-awareness needed to evolve from opposition attack dog to leader of the pack. CEOs across the country, including Mr. Bibic, see themselves as nation builders. In Mr. Poilievre, they see a politician who has spent his 20-year career building up himself and his party by trying to destroy others.

Can Mr. Poilievre learn to act like a prime minister rather than a pitbull? If he’s willing to listen, corporate leaders feel obligated to offer their best advice on how to successfully navigate the transition.

There’s a widespread feeling among CEOs that the Trudeau Liberals are out of ideas. The chasm between Bay Street and this government can’t be bridged.

This fall, Mr. Poilievre plans to start meeting with CEOs in what will often be his first face-to-face encounters with the people who run Canadian companies. The Conservative Leader is lining up sessions with the folks who build and finance homes, sell groceries, operate cellphone and internet networks and run railways and airlines.

Mr. Poilievre’s long-overdue outreach program is commendable. It’s a sign he’s realized he has the next election in the bag, and recognized the job of being prime minister starts the day after the vote.

In the past, Mr. Poilievre viewed business through the lens of politics, as practised in the fishbowl that is Parliament Hill.

In finance circles, the one banker the Conservative Leader has reached out to is Montreal-based National Bank CEO Laurent Ferreira, part of a strategy to win votes in Quebec. Until this summer, Mr. Poilievre made a point of ignoring the other bank bosses. Pandering to one region feeds into business and public cynicism over political priorities.

 

Marsha Lederman: Politicking Pierre can do better than silly sloganeering

Tony Keller: It’s beginning to look a lot like 2011 for the Liberals

Last December, Mr. Poilievre told a packed house at the Toronto-based C.D. Howe Institute that he holds Bay Street in disdain. The bankers and fund managers in the crowd all knew the Conservative Leader was talking out of both sides of his mouth, as days earlier, he was the star attraction at a fundraiser hosted by executives at investment dealer Canaccord Genuity Group Inc.

The Conservative Leader has made a point of attacking lobbyists, the only face of corporate Canada visible to a career politician, and clearly stated he won’t break bread with business groups. If Mr. Poilievre boycotts lobbyists, he needs to go the extra mile to learn what’s keeping CEOs awake at night.

To date, the historically close relationship between the Conservative Party and business community has been fractured by Mr. Poilievre’s populist approach. Going into their first meetings with the Conservative Leader, many executives question whether Mr. Poilievre is actually open to hearing what they have to say.

In the telecom sector, last week’s attacks on Mr. Bibic signalled Mr. Poilievre ignored or lacked an understanding of how Bell operates.

Mr. Poilievre faulted the telecom CEO over the company’s entirely manageable debt, without recognizing that Bell borrowed to build the fibre and 5G networks essential to a modern economy. And Mr. Poilievre bashed Mr. Bibic for paying out BCE dividends that provide income to retirees across the country. If he is willing to take personal shots at Bell’s boss, it’s safe to assume Mr. Poilievre is willing to fire broadsides at any CEO.

CEOs don’t expect politicians to thank them for investing in the country. They do expect a potential prime minister to base criticism – and policy – on facts. In whatever time remains before the next federal election, business leaders are willing to talk to Mr. Poilievre, to bring him up to speed on what they see as country-defining issues. Canada’s next leader needs to start listening.

Comment by Ocalaman on Oct 01, 2024 12:07pm
PP has positioned himself perfectly at this point.  Does anyone know anyone who is happy with Corporate Canada nowadays ? Inflation, shrinkflation, aloof executives with bloated compensation packages in spite of poor service.He has positioned himself to align with Canadians frustrations , end of the day its the population that determines the governemnts fate not CEO's.HE simuch more ...more  
Comment by Schmoby on Oct 01, 2024 8:13pm
Lol, great article Andrew Willis you political hack... Sloppy audio edit, yeah right! Can't wait to cast my vote for PP next year because Mr Dressup will cling to power as long as he can and the other lap dog parties don't have the moral compass to pull the trigger any sooner, they are more concerned with making sure those big fat pensions vest on the backs of the Canadian taxpayers.  ...more  
Comment by Quintessential1 on Oct 02, 2024 7:56am
I don't know about CEOs but he could start listening to questions from the press and answering them instead of antagonizing them and any other potential allies.  It seems he can't even make friends with even righter leaning parties in Quebec.  If he's not careful the whole thing could turn on him and with 1 year until election time there is plenty of time for this to blow up ...more  
Comment by Ocalaman on Oct 02, 2024 8:49am
I agree this man acts likes he's the annointed one and the chip he carries on his shoulder for recent government dictates will be his/our undoing. He must realize that the current governnent has not what BCE needs to thrive and by foolishly not apologizing personally to PP will be his undoing with the next government in power. sure, he didn't write the piece and possibly had no idea of its ...more  
Comment by ecolo101 on Oct 02, 2024 5:09pm
Agree with you. Only one problem would be the golden parachute of this CEO again. They just take it from shareholders value all the time. and they visit nice country and drink best scotches after that.... same old song   all the best  this is my last post on this board and yes Quintessential you are always so right ha ha ha   i am losing around $10k with BCE so be it for ...more  
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