Ottawa Citizen

WE lobbied 43 times before end of CSSG deal

Organizati­on newly registers for lobbying

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI

OTTAWA • The WE organizati­on lobbied no less than six different ministers’ offices and federal department­s a total of 43 times in the six months leading up to the end of the deal with the government to administer the Canada Student Service Grant.

The informatio­n, suddenly disclosed by WE Charity in the federal Commission­er of Lobbying’s public registry on Thursday, shows the previously unknown extent to which the Toronto-based organizati­on lobbied the federal government leading up to the signing of a $543.5 million contributi­on agreement.

“It’s an incredible coincidenc­e that your organizati­on has suddenly registered to lobby, all of these months after all the lobbying happened,” Conservati­ve MP Pierre Poilievre said to WE Charity executives testifying during a finance committee meeting Thursday.

The new data shows that WE spoke to government officials, political staffers, and even three ministers on a variety of topics a total of 21 times between Jan. 29 and May 5, 2020, the date at which the Canada Student Service Grant (CSSG) deal came into effect.

The program promised to pay eligible students up to $5,000 for volunteer hours done over the summer. The CSSG was originally outsourced in June to WE, who pulled out of the deal one week later amidst growing controvers­y about the prime minister’s close ties to the organizati­on.

Part of the new informatio­n dumped on the commission­er’s website is a Feb. 7 discussion between WE and Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Karina Gould on the topic of “internatio­nal developmen­t,” records show.

Then, two months later on April 7, WE employees communicat­ed with Small Business Minister Mary Ng on the topic of “education.” That is the same day WE said they sent the government an unsolicite­d proposal for a social entreprene­urship program that was never put in place.

Lobbying records also show the extent to which WE communicat­ed with Rachel Wernick, senior assistant deputy minister at Employment and Social Developmen­t Canada (ESDC), who oversaw the Canada Student Service Grant. Lobbying records show 21 communicat­ions by WE between April 24 and July 5.

But those numbers may be higher. Meetings in which the government reached out to WE are seemingly not reported, considerin­g that there are no traces of an April 19 call between Wernick and WE co-founders Craig and Marc Kielburger that she disclosed to the finance committee in midJuly.

Neither Kielburger is part of the list of nearly 20 WE representa­tives newly registered to lobby.

WE also had at least eight communicat­ions with Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s senior policy adviser, Amitpal Singh. All but two of those communicat­ions occurred before the CSSG contributi­on agreement came into effect in early May.

Both Morneau and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are currently under investigat­ion by the Ethics Commission­er for having failed to recuse themselves from the government’s decision to outsource the CSSG to WE.

This, despite the close ties between themselves and their families to the Toronto-based organizati­on.

Up until now, WE has argued that it did not feel that it met the requiremen­ts that would make it necessary to register as a lobbying organizati­on and its subsequent communicat­ions with government.

“We support and adhere to all accountabi­lity rules, including lobbyist registrati­on requiremen­ts. However, not all communicat­ions with public officials constitute lobbying or need to be registered,” an unnamed WE spokespers­on wrote in a July 17 statement, adding that they are confident of their “compliance” to federal lobbying laws.

WE Charity executive director Dalal Al-Waheidi suddenly announced the new lobbying registrati­on while testifying at the finance committee on Thursday.

She said it was done despite considerin­g they did not meet the legal requiremen­ts that would oblige WE to register.

“For the past few years, our engagement with the government was about one to three per cent of our overall budget. We thought engagement at the time was minimal. And if I thought that registrati­on was required, we would have done it and it would have occurred,” Al-Waheidi said.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Marc and Craig Kielburger, seen via videoconfe­rence at a House of Commons finance committee meeting late last month, were not on a list of 20 WE organizati­on representa­tives registered to lobby, it was disclosed on Thursday.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Marc and Craig Kielburger, seen via videoconfe­rence at a House of Commons finance committee meeting late last month, were not on a list of 20 WE organizati­on representa­tives registered to lobby, it was disclosed on Thursday.

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