Lethbridge Herald

Lavalin fallout may haunt Liberals

- Mia Rabson THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is facing a backlash within and outside his own party after Jody WilsonRayb­ould’s sudden resignatio­n from his cabinet.

The veterans-affairs minister quit this week amid reports she felt pressured to head off a criminal prosecutio­n of Quebec engineerin­g firm SNCLavalin when she held the justice portfolio.

On the inside, Trudeau’s own MPs are nervous, wondering about going into an election campaign with this saga hanging over them and concerned about a lack of communicat­ion from the Prime Minister’s Office — and not just about this situation.

Trudeau’s repeated claims that Canada’s relationsh­ip with Indigenous Peoples is the most important one this country has are being called into question as Indigenous leaders line up behind Wilson-Raybould and decry criticism of her as racist and sexist.

“It’s a heavy blow to see how she has been treated,” said Cheryl Casimer, political executive for the First Nations Summit, a group that includes most British Columbia First Nations and tribal councils.

The group had a regularly scheduled meeting in Vancouver Wednesday, during which a statement was released questionin­g Trudeau’s commitment to reconcilia­tion.

Casimer said WilsonRayb­ould’s rise to prominence as justice minister and attorney general in Canada gave hope to Indigenous youth for a better future for themselves and their families, and watching her be cast aside is very damaging.

“The prime minister has a lot of work to do to rebuild trust,” she said.

Indigenous voters were a factor in Trudeau’s winning the last election.

Casimer said some of the damage can be repaired if he and the government act on promises such as ensuring child-welfare legislatio­n expected next week includes a recognitio­n of First Nations jurisdicti­on. Moving forward on an Indigenous-rights framework and treaty negotiatio­ns would also help.

“He has all these nice words but now he needs to put action to those words,” she said.

Many Indigenous leaders were particular­ly upset about comments from anonymous Liberals that WilsonRayb­ould was difficult to work with and was considered untrustwor­thy by fellow members of cabinet.

Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs Grand Chief Stewart Phillip told The Canadian Press Wednesday that Trudeau “publicly humiliated” WilsonRayb­ould by removing her as justice minister and moving her to veterans-affairs, and the “smear campaign” initiated in Ottawa against her has angered Indigenous people across the country.

“Everyone within the Indigenous community, rank and file, grass roots, in every single community, Facebook, social media, everyone is talking about how upset and angry they are at the prime minister’s callous dismissal of such a committed, dedicated and principled person such as Jody Wilson-Raybould,” Phillip said.

Those anonymous whispers about WilsonRayb­ould have not abated. Nor has Trudeau, at least publicly, heeded calls from Indigenous leaders to apologize for the comments from Liberals and demand that they stop.

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