National Post (National Edition)

Speaking loosely and enthusiast­ically, I incorrectl­y referred to the Prime Minister’s Office. In fact, the outreach came from unelected officials.

WE CHARITY CO-FOUNDER MARC KIELBURGER,

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI National Post cnardi@postmedia.com Twitter: ChrisGNard­i

Aco-founder of WE Charity claimed in a June 12 conference call that the Prime Minister’s Office contacted the organizati­on directly in April to help implement a federal student volunteer grant program worth over $900 million.

WE Charity is set to collect at least $19.5 million to administer the program, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has faced questions over his and his family’s close links to the charity and how the contract was awarded.

Trudeau has maintained that the contract was handled by government bureaucrat­s. But in a recording of a video conference with various Canadian youth organizati­ons obtained by the National Post, WE Charity co-founder Marc Kielburger said his organizati­on was asked directly by the Prime Minister’s Office to help implement the Canada Student Service Grant (CSSG) the day after it was announced on April 22. When asked about the comment Tuesday, WE Charity told National Post that Kielburger “misspoke” and was never in contact with the PMO regarding the program. On Tuesday, the PMO also denied asking WE Charity to administer the CSSG.

“So myself, my team … had all watched this (April 22 announceme­nt), and the next day, the Prime Minister’s Office kindly called us and said, ‘you know that announceme­nt we just made? Would you be interested in helping us actually implement it?’,” Kielburger told participan­ts on the June 12 video conference, in which he reached out to community organizati­ons to get involved in the student grant program.

“So after much considerat­ion, we put up our hand and said, of course, we’re happy to be of assistance. This is really important at an important time,” he continued in the conference call recorded by a participan­t, whom the Post is granting anonymity due to the participan­t’s fear of retributio­n.

On Tuesday, when contacted by National Post, Kielburger retracted the account. “Speaking loosely and enthusiast­ically, I incorrectl­y referred to the Prime Minister’s Office. In fact, the outreach came from unelected officials at Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada. To be specific, contact came to We Charity the week of April 26 from a Senior Assistant Deputy Minister, Skills and Employment Branch at Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada and various additional members of ESDC staff. In fact, all discussion­s came at the instigatio­n of department­al officials and they led discussion­s with respect to contract and program parameters,” Kielburger said in an emailed statement.

The WE Charity co-founder’s initial statement has further raised concerns among those who have questioned the PMO’s involvemen­t in the decision to outsource the $912-million student grant program to WE Charity — with whom Trudeau, his wife and his mother have had close ties for years.

“When I’m listening to (WE Charity) speak on this, it sounds to me that they’re really playing up their personal connection­s to the prime minister. The prime minister needs to explain how those connection­s work, because it certainly sounds from what WE Charity was telling their inner circle is that they were called directly, they had the inside track. It was all golden for them,” said NDP ethics critic Charlie Angus.

Duff Conacher, of the accountabi­lity watchdog group Democracy Watch, said he thinks WE Charity’s explanatio­n that Kielburger accidental­ly misspoke is “not plausible.”

“It’s totally different to have a Prime Minister’s Office call you as opposed to someone in the bureaucrac­y,” Conacher said. “I just don’t believe he would be confusing that, because they’ve received grants and contracts from government department­s. So they know the difference between the government department and the Prime Minister’s Office.”

Since last week, Trudeau has repeated that the public service, not his office, had determined that WE Charity was the only organizati­on capable of administer­ing the program. He has not clarified if that determinat­ion was made before or after the April 22 press conference. But transcript­s of his announceme­nt, as well as the ministeria­l briefing an hour later, show no record of WE Charity’s involvemen­t.

In fact, the first time the government mentions that the CSSG will be administer­ed by WE Charity is in a briefing document provided to media on June 25, two months after the initial announceme­nt, and two weeks after Kielburger’s video conference call.

Trudeau has defended the exclusive contract by claiming that bureaucrat­s had determined WE Charity was the only option. “We needed to have a partner to help establish the networks and to deliver that with all partners across the country. And as the public service dug into it, they came back with only one organizati­on that was capable of networking and organizing and delivering this program on the scale that we needed it and that was the WE program,” Trudeau told reporters last Friday.

Trudeau and his family have close ties to the organizati­on. Trudeau has regularly attended or hosted the organizati­on’s annual WE Day, a stadium-sized rally for Canadian youth, between 2012 and 2017.

His wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau is a WE ambassador, hosts a podcast for the WE organizati­on and attended a WE Day event in London, England, in March with her daughter and Margaret Trudeau, the prime minister’s mother, who has also served as a WE ambassador.

In the call with community groups, Kielburger later explains that the CSSG remains a government initiative that WE Charity is only “helping to implement,” calling it a “whitelabel solution.”

In marketing terms, a white label generally refers to an unlabelled product or service produced by one organizati­on that is then relabelled by another organizati­on to make it appear as a product of the second organizati­on. Kielburger’s explanatio­n did not clarify whether he meant the white label was for the federal government or for the WE Charity.

The National Post reported this week that WE Charity had received a series of exclusivel­y sole-source contracts worth a total of $120,000 from the federal government over the past three years. Four of the five contracts have been in the last 15 months.

WE Charity also received nearly $5.2 million in grants and contributi­ons from various federal department­s, starting in 2017, five times the amount it received from the federal government between 2012 and 2016 ($1 million) under another name, Kids Can Free The Children.

IT SOUNDS TO ME LIKE THEY’RE

REALLY PLAYING UP THEIR (CONNECTION­S TO TRUDEAU).

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Craig, left, and Marc Kielburger introduce Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau at the WE Day celebratio­ns in
2015.Trudeau has defended an exclusive contract by claiming bureaucrat­s had determined WE Charity was the only option.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Craig, left, and Marc Kielburger introduce Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau at the WE Day celebratio­ns in 2015.Trudeau has defended an exclusive contract by claiming bureaucrat­s had determined WE Charity was the only option.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada