Medicine Hat News

Ethics questions for Finance Minister Morneau not dying down

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Cracks began to show in Bill Morneau’s cucumber-cool countenanc­e Friday as the finance minister faced still more questions about the handling of his personal fortune, even after pledging to sell at least $21 million worth of stock in hopes of muting conflict-of-interest allegation­s.

More than once, Morneau struck a note of exasperati­on during a news conference in Waterloo, Ont., where he was promoting the Liberal government’s efforts to address concerns and complaints about a package of proposed smallbusin­ess tax reforms.

Just the day before, the former businessma­n committed to sell about one million shares in Morneau Shepell, the familyfoun­ded human resources and pension management firm that he helped build over 25 years, and to put the rest of his substantia­l personal assets in a blind trust.

But if those steps — over and above what Canada’s ethics commission­er told him would be necessary, he reinterate­d — were meant to silence questions from journalist­s and opposition critics, Morneau was sorely mistaken.

At one point, he was asked about his use of numbered holding companies based in Alberta and Ontario to hold some of his assets.

“So, is the question why they’re numbered companies and they don’t have names? You know, seriously,” Morneau replied, all but rolling his eyes.

“The process we have in our country isn’t that I report to journalist­s on my personal situation. It’s that I report to the ethics commission­er and I make sure that she fully understand­s my situation.”

Morneau was in Waterloo to announce government plans to work with the venture capital and angel investment sectors to address concerns about the tax reform proposals and ensure investment in the country’s fastest-growing companies is not impeded.

It was just the latest in a series of changes Morneau has announced throughout the week to the tax reform plan. The changes have been welcomed by business groups, farmers and others who’d denounced the original proposals, although they continue withhold final judgment until they see the details.

But the announceme­nts, including revival of a promise to cut the small business tax rate to nine per cent, have been overshadow­ed by the controvers­y swirling around Morneau’s personal finances and ethics.

“By following the rules and by living up to the highest standards, by respecting the officer of Parliament, you know, I expected that that should work. I expected that doing what finance ministers before me had done, doing what the other 337 members of Parliament of have done, is the right way to address that issue,” he said at one point.

“What I found is that there’s some noise around this. There’s people like you asking about specific issues in my personal finances.”

Morneau reiterated Friday that he followed the advice of federal ethics commission­er Mary Dawson to the letter and is now going beyond her recommenda­tions in selling off his Morneau Shepell shares and putting everything else in blind trust.

In a letter to Morneau shortly after he was appointed to cabinet, Dawson told him he was “not required” to divest his assets or put them in a blind trust because they were not directly held by him but by numbered companies he owned.

She recommende­d that “the best measure of compliance” would be to set up a conflict-ofinterest screen, administer­ed by his chief of staff, to ensure he abstained from any discussion or decision that might impact the interests of Morneau Shepell.

Such a screen would prevent any appearance of a conflict of interest and “also ensure the integrity and impartiali­ty of cabinet decisions and maintain the public’s confidence,” Dawson wrote in the letter, released by Morneau’s office Thursday.

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Bill Morneau

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