PMO consists of approximately 100 partisan appointees, or
exempted staff in federal government jargon, who support the Prime Minister in carrying out the functions demanded of a head of a democratic national government, a political party leader, and a Member of Parliament, with focus on supporting the prime minister in performing duties where public administration objectives overlap, intersect or compete with the prime minister's political interests by nature or by circumstances, or duties which successful execution the governing party's electoral fortune is highly sensitive to. PMO staff performs functions mainly of the following nature: • substantive (such as policy development, legislative strategy, cabinet agenda coordination) • marketing and communication (speechwriting, press relations) • intelligence (public opinion research, public appointment vetting) • relationship (stakeholder engagement, community outreach, caucus management) • clerical (scheduling, correspondence) • operational (tour logistics, security coordination, protocol) One of PMO's most consequential roles is public appointments. While PMO is most visibly and directly involved in appointments by order-in-council, which are the appointment formally made in the name of the
monarch or the
governor general on the
advice of the prime minister or the cabinet, its public appointments unit is involved in the recruitment, vetting and appointment process of many other governmental or pseudo governmental positions, in most case with support from the Privy Council Office. The degree of its involvement, control, and the influence or authority it wields varies depending on various factors. PMO's staff remuneration and operational costs are incurred as part of the
estimates of the
Privy Council Office (PCO), the federal department made up of career civil servants responsible for cross-government coordination and providing support and non-partisan advice to the federal cabinet, and the two offices are co-located in the
Office of the Prime Minister and Privy Council building (formerly known as the
Langevin Block) directly facing
Parliament Hill. While PMO staff collaborates extensively with PCO officials and the two offices are functionally interdependent of each other, PMO is an autonomous unit not subject to the management authority of PCO's departmental executive leader, the
Clerk of the Privy Council, who is also the head of the entire
federal civil service workforce. The following 1971 quote by
Gordon Robertson, then Clerk of the Privy Council has been often cited by academic discourse to highlight the distinction of the two offices, and the importance of the proper maintenance of their relationship."The Prime Minister's Office is partisan, politically oriented, yet operationally sensitive. The Privy Council Office is non-partisan, operationally oriented yet politically sensitive.... What is known in each office is provided freely and openly to the other if it is relevant or needed for its work, but each acts from a perspective and in a role quite different from the other." ==History==