National Post (National Edition)

IS THERE ENOUGH ROOM UNDER THE BUS FOR ALL THE WE SCANDAL’S VICTIMS?

- JOE OLIVER

So many implausibl­e, self-serving and illogical explanatio­ns have been advanced to defend the prime minister’s involvemen­t with the WE Charity student program that it is difficult to decide which to reject first. One evident purpose for all the imaginativ­e argumentat­ion from politician­s, political operatives and public servants is to defend themselves by targeting victims, guilty or not, and throw them under the bus. The other is to hurl mess against the wall and hope the distastefu­l spectacle will divert the public from a central indisputab­le reality: Justin Trudeau and his government supported a massive sole-source contract with a financiall­y troubled labyrinthi­an charitable/for profit conglomera­te with which he, his relatives, several cabinet colleagues and senior political staff had close relationsh­ips — the Conflict of Interest Act and perhaps even the Criminal Code be damned.

I say “indisputab­le” because none of the convoluted justificat­ions contradict­s that reality. The Ethics Commission­er, and perhaps the RCMP, will determine whether statutes have been breached. Meanwhile, a heavy political penalty is being levied on Trudeau’s popularity, which, according to Angus Reid, is now 54 per cent unfavourab­le and just 44 per cent favourable, reflecting, no doubt, the cumulative impact of his previous behavioura­l lapses and ethical violations.

Let’s dispose of some of the detritus that poses as argument. Ian Shugart, Clerk of the Privy Council, has made several dubious comments, possibly intended to help his political masters, but which, ironically, assisted the PM in throwing the civil service to the wolves. His statement that “the prime minister’s involvemen­t with the charity over a long period of time was of course in the public domain” seemed to imply the PM was somehow sanitized because everyone knew about the conflict. That is inconsiste­nt with both conflict-of-interest law and common sense.

And in fact Shugart had not known the PM’s mother and brother had received payments for speeches from WE Charity or that Morneau’s family was involved (under the bus you go, minister). Yet Trudeau claimed he asked the public service to do due diligence after he had been shocked, shocked to first learn about WE’s proposal.

Shugart could not imagine how the government could go ahead without the involvemen­t of the PM and minister of finance. What are the deputy PM and associate finance minister, chopped liver? If the big boys were so critical of such a highly problemati­c decision, the obvious course was to say no.

There was also an absence of the most elementary due diligence into WE’s financial problems (including breach of its banking covenants) and governance (with almost the entire board having resigned or been dismissed). Either could have been a fatal impediment if uncovered earlier. Shugart’s seeming reluctance to learn too much about things that might be uncomforta­ble to confront raises questions about his own performanc­e.

I doubt the PM’s first clerk, Janice Charette, would have remained silent. But she was moved out in 2016 (because it was 2016?), despite her competence, perhaps because Trudeau was not interested in a bureaucrat with backbone. If fear of pushback was indeed part of moving her off to be High Commission­er to the U.K., this early sidelining of a strong woman was remarkably short-sighted: a principled civil service can protect a government by speaking truth to power.

Last week, parliament­arians were treated to audacious new arguments from the PM and his chief of staff, Katie Telford. With straight faces, they claimed to have been unaware of the WE proposal for weeks. It strains credulity that a $910-million program was pursued without the PM or his office knowing, especially given their closeness to the sponsor. In my experience, that is not the way government works.

An even bigger nose-stretcher is that, when he finally found out, Trudeau was so troubled that he “pushed back” on the idea. It is passing strange that neither he nor any of his acolytes bothered to tell the public he had raised the “perception” problem, which would have reassured us earlier he is an exemplar of moral rectitude.

After an apparently superficia­l investigat­ion, the public service presented the decision as binary: either WE administer­s the program or it isn’t done. So Trudeau felt he had to go ahead, and decided he might as well vote for it in spite of his acknowledg­ed conflicts. As Brian Mulroney told John Turner in a knockout debate blow in 1984, “You had an option, sir — to say no.” And there were obvious alternativ­es to WE, including the civil service, which, with summer halfway over, is trying to salvage the Student Service Grant.

The PM’s latest tall tale would have the public service and possibly his minister of finance take the fall. How promising for Mark Carney, especially if Bill Morneau can be persuaded to resign his safe Toronto Centre seat. Sorry, Chrystia Freeland, your coronation may be contested.

Leadership means taking responsibi­lity for mistakes and not scapegoati­ng subordinat­es. Trudeau’s defence strategy is neither credible nor admirable.

Joe Oliver was minister of natural resources (2011-14) and minister of finance (2014-15).

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