Cape Breton Post

Lobbying watchdog: three cases sent to RCMP

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI

OTTAWA – The federal lobbying watchdog says she has referred three files to the RCMP for criminal investigat­ion since the beginning of the pandemic in a year that has seen a significan­t uptick in lobbying.

“Since April 2020, I have opened 16 preliminar­y assessment­s, and currently have five ongoing investigat­ions. Also since April, I have referred three investigat­ion files to the RCMP. As of today, there are 11 files with the RCMP,” Commission­er of Lobbying Nancy Bélanger revealed to members of the ethics committee Friday.

Bélanger told MPs that the Lobbying Act did not allow her to comment on the progressio­n of these specific cases because any one of her files “may become criminal investigat­ions, and I cannot jeopardize that.”

The commission­er was called to detail her office’s work as questions have swirled throughout the summer about the lobbying activities by both WE Charity and the husband of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s chief of staff. Both have denied any wrongdoing.

During her testimony, Bélanger said that 2020 has been a busy year for lobbyists, particular­ly due to the COVID19 pandemic.

“Since February, lobbyists have provided details with respect to more than 21,000 arranged and oral communicat­ions. When compared to the same period in 2018 and 2019, it’s clear that more communicat­ions are occurring in 2020,” Bélanger said.

To illustrate the increase, the commission­er said lobbyists registered nearly 2,000 communicat­ions per month during the past summer, a roughly 33 per cent increase compared to the monthly average of 1,500 in previous years. Unsurprisi­ngly, “health” was the main lobbying topic through the spring months as the pandemic first rolled through the provinces, before discussion­s shifted mainly to the topic of “economic developmen­t” in May, Bélanger said.

Allegation­s of lobbying wrongdoing have made headlines during the pandemic, particular­ly over the summer.

In late August, the commission­er confirmed that she had launched a “preliminar­y assessment” into media reports by Vice and Postmedia that Rob Silver, husband to Trudeau’s chief of staff, had unsuccessf­ully pressed members of the Finance Ministry and the Prime Minister’s Office to make changes to the wage subsidy that would uniquely benefit his employer.

This came less than a month after it was revealed that the government was paying up to $84 million to Silver’s employer, mortgage company MCAP, to administer its COVID-19 emergency commercial rent assistance program for small businesses.

At the time, the Prime Minister’s Office assured that a voluntary screen had been set up between Chief of Staff Katie Telford and her husband, and that she had no dealings in either matter.

The commission­er’s office also acknowledg­ed in September that it had opened a file on WE Charity’s dealings with the government leading up to its controvers­ial $543.5-million deal to administer the Canada Student Service Grant in late June.

The organizati­on pulled out of the deal one week later, but reports over the summer continued to reveal close ties between the WE organizati­on and both Trudeau’s and then-Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s families.

 ?? PHOTO BY MONICA SCHIPPER/GETTY IMAGES FOR WE DAY ?? Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, left, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speak on stage at a WE Charity event in New York in 2017.
PHOTO BY MONICA SCHIPPER/GETTY IMAGES FOR WE DAY Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, left, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speak on stage at a WE Charity event in New York in 2017.
 ?? PHOTO BY ROB SILVER/TWITTER ?? Robert Silver, who is married to Katie Telford, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Chief of Staff.
PHOTO BY ROB SILVER/TWITTER Robert Silver, who is married to Katie Telford, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Chief of Staff.

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