Lethbridge Herald

Philpott fans the flames

LIBERALS SURVIVE FILIBUSTER TACTICS

- Joan Bryden THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Former cabinet minister Jane Philpott fanned the flames of the SNC-Lavalin fire Thursday as Liberals struggled to douse the controvers­y and focus Canadians’ attention on their pre-election budget.

Philpott gave an interview to Maclean’s magazine in which she said there is “much more to the story” of improper pressure allegedly exerted on former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to avert a criminal prosecutio­n of Montreal engineerin­g giant SNC-Lavalin.

The early-morning publicatio­n of the interview coincided with a Conservati­veorchestr­ated filibuster, landing like a bombshell in the House of Commons where exhausted MPs were in their 12th hour of non-stop voting, line by line, on the government‘s spending plans. The filibuster, which continued into the afternoon Thursday, was intended to protest Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s refusal to offer a blanket waiver of privilege and confidenti­ality that Wilson-Raybould has claimed is necessary if she is to fully tell her side of the story.

In the late afternoon, Conservati­ves believed they had caught the Liberals shorthande­d, with not enough of them ready to vote to pass one item. Since spending votes are confidence measures, the government might have been at risk.

Liberals quickly flooded into the chamber, male MPs hastily doing up their neckties for decorum. Assistant deputy speaker Anthony Rota, an Ontario Liberal then in the chair, cited a Commons rule to say that it’s not the speaker’s duty to police whether members were in their seats at the critical time to be eligible to vote. When the tally came, as Tories heckled, the Liberals got the motion carried.

Philpott, who resigned early this month as Treasury Board president, told Maclean’s that she raised concerns with Trudeau, during a Jan. 6 discussion about an imminent cabinet shuffle, that Wilson-Raybould was being moved out of Justice because of her refusal to intervene in the SNC-Lavalin case.

“I think Canadians might want to know why I would have raised that with the prime minister a month before the public knew about it. Why would I have felt that there was a reason why Minister Wilson-Raybould should not be shuffled?” she said. “My sense is that Canadians would like to know the whole story.”

Philpott appears already to be free to talk about that Jan. 6 conversati­on with Trudeau: The government has waived solicitor-client privilege and cabinet confidenti­ality for last fall, when Wilson-Raybould alleges she was improperly pressured, until Jan. 14, when she was moved to the Veterans Affairs portfolio. The waiver applies not just to Wilson-Raybould but to “any persons who directly participat­ed in discussion­s with her” relating to the criminal prosecutio­n of SNC-Lavalin for alleged corrupt practices in Libya.

That waiver allowed Wilson-Raybould to testify for nearly four hours before the House of Commons justice committee.

Trudeau rejected Thursday the opposition parties’ contention, echoed by Philpott, that a broader waiver is required to cover the period between Jan. 14 and Wilson-Raybould’s resignatio­n from cabinet a month later.

“It was extremely important that the former attorney general be allowed to share completely her perspectiv­es, her experience­s on this issue, and that is what she was able to do,” he said after an announceme­nt in Mississaug­a, pumping up the latest budget’s promise to invest $2.2 billion more in municipal infrastruc­ture projects.

“The issue at question is the issue of pressure around the Lavalin issue while she was attorney general and she got to speak fully to that.”

Trudeau also gave his version of the Jan. 6 conversati­on with Philpott, during which he informed her she would be moving to Treasury Board and that Wilson-Raybould would be taking her place at Indigenous Services. His version echoed the testimony of his former principal secretary, Gerald Butts, to the justice committee.

“She asked me directly if this was in link to the SNC-Lavalin decision and I told her no, it was not,” Trudeau said. “She then mentioned it might be a challenge for Jody Wilson-Raybould to take on the role of Indigenous Services and I asked her for her help, which she gladly offered to give, in explaining to Jody Wilson-Raybould how exciting this job was and what a great thing it would be for her to have that role.”

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