National Post (National Edition)

NEW RULE CHANGES COULD WAIVE ANY SNC BAN

‘Trudeau had his fingerprin­ts all over this’

- MIA RABSON and JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA• Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will be pressured Monday to testify at a House of Commons committee looking into allegation­s the prime minister and his staff pressured former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to stop a criminal prosecutio­n of Montrealba­sed engineerin­g giant SNC-Lavalin.

The Conservati­ve party will introduce a motion arguing that since Trudeau keeps saying the Commons justice committee is well placed to investigat­e the allegation­s, he should have no problem showing up there himself to answer questions about his role in the matter.

The motion will ask all MPs to vote to call Trudeau before the committee for at least two hours, by March 15.

Motions in the House of Commons are not binding and regardless of the outcome, the committee itself would still have to decide whether to invite Trudeau. Besides that, MPs, including the prime minister, cannot be forced to appear before committees.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer said Friday the committee has already heard from the clerk of the privy council, Michael Wernick, that “Justin Trudeau had his fingerprin­ts all over this.”

Wernick told the committee Thursday that no improper pressure was applied to Wilson- Raybould, who quit the cabinet last week, and that Trudeau’s staff have conducted themselves with “the highest standards of integrity.”

He said that Trudeau was worried a prosecutio­n might result in SNC-Lavalin’s moving its operations overseas or closing up shop, hurting innocent employees, shareholde­rs, pensioners, thirdparty suppliers and communitie­s in which the company operates. Wernick said he told Wilson- Raybould about those concerns during a conversati­on in December but that his intention was to provide “context,” not pressure.

He also said the prime minister assured Wilson-Raybould at every opportunit­y that a decision on whether to halt the prosecutio­n was hers alone.

Trudeau said Wernick’s words should carry weight with Canadians.

“The clerk of the privy council, Michael Wernick, is an extraordin­ary pub- lic servant who has served this country and continues to serve this country under government­s of different political stripes, with integrity and brilliance,” said Trudeau. “He is someone we need to heed very carefully when he chooses to express himself publicly and I’m sure everyone is taking a careful look at his words yesterday.”

But Scheer said Wernick’s testimony laid bare just how many times Trudeau, members of his political staff, and Wernick spoke to Wilson-Raybould in an attempt to change her mind and allow SNC-Lavalin to enter into a remediatio­n agreement rather than go on trial for fraud and bribery related to the firm’s work in Libya.

Scheer dismissed Wernick’s assertion that those conversati­ons were within bounds.

“It’s all well and good for someone who is trying to defend his own actions and defend the actions of the government to come to that conclusion,” said Scheer.

Some opposition MPs and pundits have suggested Wernick crossed into partisansh­ip by defending the government. Scheer wouldn’t go that far but he did seem surprised by what Wernick said.

“I had certainly not seen a performanc­e like that in the past,” said Scheer.

Trudeau’s government has been rocked by the anonymous allegation­s that Wilson-Raybould was under pressure from the Prime Minister’s Office to instruct the director of public prosecutio­ns to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement with SNC-Lavalin — a kind of plea bargain that would force the company to pay restitutio­n but would spare it a criminal conviction that could cripple it by barring it from bidding on government contracts for up to 10 years.

Also on Friday, SNC-Lavalin chief executive Neil Bruce lashed out over the pummelling the company is taking from politician­s.

“Frankly, we’ ve had enough of all that, and we’re just going to vigorously defend ourselves in court, and that’s our strategy,” he said.

Bruce said the Public Prosecutio­n Service of Canada can still invite SNC-Lavalin to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement and the company would be willing to do so.

“But frankly, it doesn’t look like that today,” he said.

Trudeau was not as eager to heed Wernick’s opinion on solicitor-client privilege, the principle Wilson-Raybould has repeatedly cited to refuse comment. The clerk told the committee he doesn’t think solicitor-client privilege applies in this instance.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer said the PM should be prepared to speak at House of Commons committee.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer said the PM should be prepared to speak at House of Commons committee.

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