Spector resigned from the public service in 1996, and upon his departure
The Globe and Mail editorialized: "The last veil was stripped from the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency last week with the departure of Norman Spector. The veteran public servant had been appointed president of the federal government's East Coast regional development body last year in order to clean up ACOA's operations and repair its shady reputation. His exit is an acknowledgment that such attempts are doomed to failure. There is no longer any sense pretending that ACOA serves any useful economic purpose." He became Vice-President, Corporate Affairs for
Imperial Tobacco Limited in September 1996. In January 1997, he was appointed publisher of
The Jerusalem Post. In the 1990s and 2000s, he appeared on numerous TV panels in English and French and wrote a column in
The Globe and Mail and in
Le Devoir. While at
The Globe and Mail, Mr. Spector wrote "Why Ms. Harper joined the PM's CTV Christmas interview," citing a veteran
Ottawa Citizen columnist who reported that "in Ottawa, tongues have been wagging for two years about trouble in one political marriage. One of the partners is now said to have left the nest. It hasn't made the newspapers, at least not yet." The
Globe and Mail removed the blog post from its website, saying that Spector fell short of its "editorial standards with respect to fairness, balance and accuracy." He published a book, ''Chronicle of a War Foretold: How Mideast Peace Became America's Fight
in 2003 and, a year later, wrote about his experience working for Mulroney in the Afterword to A Secret Trial''—
William Kaplan's second book on what is popularly known as the
Airbus affair. Spector appeared as a witness in early 2008 at the
House of Commons of Canada Ethics Committee's hearings on relations between Mulroney and German-Canadian lobbyist
Karlheinz Schreiber, which is formally known as the review of the Airbus settlement. A
public inquiry, called by Prime Minister
Stephen Harper, also took place on these matters, following the Ethics Committee's hearings. In October 2006, Spector gained a considerable amount of press coverage for referring to
Belinda Stronach as "a bitch" after her then-boyfriend and fellow
Conservative MP
Peter MacKay referred to her as a "dog" in the House of Commons. In May 2006, Stronach agreed to join the
Liberal cabinet of Prime Minister
Paul Martin after dining with MacKay and not telling him what she was about to do. While Stronach demanded an apology from MacKay, she did not ask that Spector apologize and he did not provide one. Since 2013, Spector has been a member of
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation's "On the Island" political panel. Following the British Columbia election of 2017, he advised
Green Party leader
Andrew Weaver in negotiations with the
Liberal and
New Democratic Party that resulted in the defeat of the former on a non-confidence vote, and the formation by the latter of a minority government supported by the Greens. ==References==