Medicine Hat News

WE details thousands in fees for Trudeaus as volunteers wait

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA

The WE organizati­on has paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in speaking fees to members of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s family, it acknowledg­ed Thursday, as organizati­ons that need volunteers awaited word of the future of a $900-million program WE was to run.

The government says it is working on what to do with the Canada Student Services Grant after its agreement with WE was cancelled amid controvers­y over the Trudeau family’s connection­s to the Toronto-based charity and its forprofit arm, ME to WE Social Enterprise.

The WE organizati­on said Thursday that it had paid Trudeau’s mother Margaret about $250,000 for 28 speaking appearance­s at WE-related events between 2016 and 2020.

His brother Alexandre has been paid $32,000 for eight events, according to WE. The organizati­on that represents them as speakers was paid additional commission­s, WE said.

And Trudeau’s wife Sophie Gregoire Trudeau received $1,400 in 2012 for a single appearance that year.

Most of the payments went from the for-profit component of the organizati­on, which sponsors the charitable component, WE Charity said in a statement, though about $64,000 went from WE Charity to Margaret Trudeau’s speaker’s bureau because of “an error in billing / payment.”

“Justin Trudeau has never been paid by WE Charity or ME to WE Social Enterprise for any speeches or any other matters,” WE Charity said.

Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet said late Thursday that Trudeau should step aside until the matter is fully probed, turning power over to Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland.

Trudeau is now under investigat­ion by the ethics commission­er over allegation­s of a potential conflict of interest when the government awarded the sole-source contract to WE. Trudeau has acknowledg­ed he did not recuse himself when cabinet approved the deal.

Trudeau has maintained the nonpartisa­n public service recommende­d WE to administer the deal, while his spokesman Alex Wellstead on Thursday said “the prime minister’s relatives engage with a variety of organizati­ons and support many personal causes on their own accord.”

“What is important to remember here is that this is about a charity supporting students. The Canada Student Service Grant program is about giving young people opportunit­ies to contribute to their communitie­s, not about benefits to anyone else.”

WE’s sudden departure from the volunteeri­ng program has created confusion as the days tick past for young people to put in hours for which the government promises to pay them up to $5,000 toward schooling.

Several non-profits say they and their volunteers are anxiously waiting for answers from the government, including whether the program is going to go ahead and the students they have already taken on will be compensate­d for their work.

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