National Post (National Edition)

PM, ambassador settle defamation suit

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OTTAWA • An out-of-court settlement has been reached in a long-running defamation suit filed against Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Canada’s ambassador to the U.S. by a would-be Liberal candidate and her formerMP husband.

The lawsuit was initiated almost four years ago by Christine Innes after she was barred from running for the Liberal party in a federal byelection in the Toronto riding of Trinity-Spadina and further prohibited from seeking a Liberal nomination in any riding for the 2015 general election.

David MacNaughto­n, who was the party’s Ontario campaign co-chair at the time, cited “bullying and intimidati­on” tactics employed by the Innes campaign team — specifical­ly by Innes’ husband, former Liberal MP Tony Ianno — as the reason for the decision.

Innes filed suit in April, 2014, against Trudeau, then leader of the third party, and MacNaughto­n, seeking $1.5 million in damages to her reputation; Ianno joined the suit a few months later, seeking another $1.5 million for damage to his reputation, lost business opportunit­ies and emotional suffering.

The pair continued to pursue the case after Trudeau became prime minister in 2015 and tapped MacNaughto­n to be Canada’s ambassador to Washington.

The Liberal party says the suit has now been settled “by mutual agreement of the parties,” who have agreed to keep the terms confidenti­al.

The party said Friday it “regrets the circumstan­ces that led to this lawsuit.”

It also “acknowledg­es the many years of public service and deep and valued contributi­on” that Innes and Ianno have made to public affairs and to the people of Canada.

MacNaughto­n’s decision, backed by Trudeau, to ban Innes was the highest-profile controvers­y surroundin­g Liberal nomination­s in the run-up to the 2015 election.

Innes maintained she was barred from running in the byelection because she refused to promise that she wouldn’t eventually challenge one of Trudeau’s star recruits — Chrystia Freeland, now foreign affairs minister — for a Liberal nomination in Toronto after riding boundaries were redrawn for the 2015 general election.

The party said the decision to bar Innes followed complaints by young Liberal volunteers who alleged Ianno had pressured them and disparaged Trudeau and Freeland.

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