National Post

Parliament must get documents, Speaker says

- Jim Bronskill

• A federal attempt to shield documents related to the firing of two scientists is a violation of parliament­ary privilege and must be tossed out of court, House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota says.

In a notice of motion filed Thursday in Federal Court, Rota says the House, by virtue of its parliament­ary privileges, has the power to send for the “persons, papers and records” it deems necessary to its functions.

“This constituti­onally entrenched power is fundamenta­l to our system of parliament­ary democracy, and to Parliament’s critical role in acting as the ‘grand inquest of the nation’ and in holding the executive branch of government to account,” Rota’s notice says.

The executive and the judicial branches do not have the jurisdicti­on to question, overrule, modify, control or review the exercise of this privilege by the House, the filing adds.

“Under our system of democratic government, the House has unfettered discretion and authority in exercising this power. A contrary determinat­ion would be inconsiste­nt with an essential feature of Canadian parliament­ary democracy and the separation of powers.

“Only Parliament itself has the authority to abrogate, modify or limit its parliament­ary privileges.”

The Liberal government asked the court last month to affirm a prohibitio­n on disclosure of records concerning dismissal of two scientists from Canada’s highest-security laboratory.

The move came shortly after Rota reprimande­d Public Health Agency of Canada head Iain Stewart over his repeated refusal to provide the unredacted documents to MPS on the Canada-china relations committee.

Stewart has advised the attorney general in a notice under the Canada Evidence Act that sensitive or potentiall­y injurious informatio­n would be revealed should the documents be given to the committee.

After considerin­g the notice, the attorney general filed a court applicatio­n requesting an order confirming the documents should remain under wraps.

Opposition parties have joined forces to demand the documents in hope that they’ll shed light on why scientists Xiangguo Qiu and her husband, Keding Cheng, were escorted out of Winnipeg’s National Microbiolo­gy Laboratory in July 2019 and fired last January.

They also seek documents related to the transfer, overseen by Qiu, of deadly Ebola and Henipah viruses to China’s Wuhan Institute of Virology in March 2019.

Justice Minister David Lametti, who is also attorney general, said last month the decision to apply to the court was made by Justice officials in accordance with the Canada Evidence Act.

Rota’s notice of motion says Parliament expressed no intention to modify or limit its privileges in adopting the section of the Canada Evidence Act in question.

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