National Post

PM’S TRIP FOCUS OF ETHICS PROBE

Watchdog sees potential violations

- David Akin

OTTAWA • The federal Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commission­er has launched an investigat­ion into the circumstan­ces of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s New Year’s holiday in the Bahamas, the National Post has learned, the first time a sitting prime minister has come under scrutiny by the independen­t parliament­ary watchdog.

The commission­er, Mary Dawson, is considerin­g two potential violations of the Conflict of Interest Act, according to a letter she sent to one of the two Conservati­ve MPs who filed separate formal complaints about Trudeau’s holiday at the Bahamas Island owned by the billionair­e philanthro­pist and spiritual leader, the Aga Khan.

A copy of that letter was provided to the Post and, in it, Dawson said she believes that, based on reports she has read in the National Post, there are grounds to i nvestigate Trudeau f or, first, a potential conflict of interest in receiving a free vacation from the Aga Khan, the founder and a director of an organizati­on that is a federally registered lobbyist and, second, for potentiall­y violating a section of the Act that prohibits all ministers from using private aircraft.

Dawson, in the letter to Conservati­ve MP Blaine Calkins, writes that she is “of the view” that his request to open an investigat­ion “satisfies the requiremen­ts” of that part of the Conflict of Interest Act that requires that the complainan­t “set out reasonable grounds for the belief that the contravent­ion has occurred.”

The maximum sanction that Dawson may levy for a violation of the Act is $ 500 per violation — a relatively paltry sum for a prime minister who earns more than $ 350,000 a year and gets a free home.

But while Trudeau might easily pay any fine, the political penalty may be more expensive.

The opposition is almost certain to have a field day if Trudeau becomes the first prime minister in Canada’s history to violate a federal statute — a statute on ethics and conflict of interest, no less — while in office.

The commission­er’s office and the current Conflict of Interest Act were creations of the Harper government in 2007.

While Harper was accused by his opponents sev-

I’VE SAID A NUMBER OF TIMES THIS WAS A PERSONAL FAMILY VACATION.

eral times of unethical behaviour, he was neither the subject of any investigat­ion nor any finding of any violation of the act during his time in office.

Trudeau, then, becomes the first prime minister to face the scrutiny of the commission­er, something he said last week that he welcomed.

“I’ ve said a number of times this was a personal family vacation,” Trudeau t old reporters Friday in Peterborou­gh, Ont.

“And any questions that the ethics commission­er has and that Canadians have, we’re happy to engage with.”

When Trudeau confirmed on Thursday that he had used the Aga Khan’s private helicopter to travel the 115 kilometres back and forth between Nassau and the Aga Khan’s private island, Trudeau said: “It’s something we look forward to discussing with the Conflict of Interest Commission­er but we don’t see an issue on that.”

The investigat­ion, though, may also put a spotlight on the relationsh­ip between Dawson and Trudeau.

Dawson’s s e ven-year-term of office ended in early January, but Trudeau extended it for an additional six months while he determines who ought to get the next permanent seven- year appointmen­t, or whether he should extend Dawson’s contract again.

Duff Conacher, the founder of Democracy Watch, said that puts Dawson in a conflict of interest herself, investigat­ing the very public office holder who has the power to extend her appointmen­t or approve her reappointm­ent in six months.

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