Penticton Herald

Political fallout continues despite shuttering WE

-

OTTAWA — The demise of WE’s Canadian operations won’t take the heat off Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over his government’s decision to hire the charity to run a now-defunct student volunteer program.

NDP MP Charlie Angus says WE’s announceme­nt Wednesday that it is shuttering its Canadian operations only underscore­s the lack of due diligence done by the government before handing administra­tion of the program over to an organizati­on that was evidently in financial distress.

Two months before the government gave the contract to WE in late June, Angus notes that the organizati­on had laid off hundreds of staff and replaced almost its entire board of directors, which had been denied access to the charity’s financial reports.

Angus says WE was “desperate” and cashed in on its connection­s to Trudeau, his family and his former finance minister, Bill Morneau, to persuade them to pay the organizati­on to run the student service grant program.

Trudeau himself has been a featured speaker at half a dozen WE events and his wife, mother and brother have been paid hundreds of thousands of dollars over the years in expenses and speaking fees.

Trudeau and Morneau have apologized for not recusing themselves from the decision to pay WE up to $43.5 million to administer the program and are both under investigat­ion by the federal ethics watchdog for possible breaches of the Conflict of Interest Act.

“WE shutting down doesn’t make the Liberals’ scandal go away,” said Angus.

The government insists it was bureaucrat­s who recommende­d WE was the only organizati­on capable of administer­ing the massive national program. However, thousands of documents released by the government suggest public servants may have been nudged to look at WE by their political masters.

Two House of Commons committees were in the midst of investigat­ing the deal and another two committees were preparing to launch separate investigat­ions when Trudeau prorogued Parliament last month, putting an end to the committees’ work.

However, the WE affair is likely to continue dogging the government when Parliament reopens on Sept. 23 with the demise of the organizati­on’s Canadian operations only adding fuel to the fire.

“WE closure changes nothing,” said Conservati­ve finance critic Pierre Poilievre in a Thursday-morning tweet. “Finance committee will resume investigat­ions once Parliament opens. You can run but you can’t hide.”

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’Toole said Wednesday that WE must hand over all the documents requested by the finance committee about the student service grant program.

The program was supposed to cover up to $5,000 in education costs for students who volunteere­d during the COVID-19 pandemic. The government initially pegged the cost of the program at $912 million but the sole-source deal with WE put the cost at $543 million.

The deal stipulated that WE was not to make money on the program. The charity has repaid the full $30 million the government gave it to launch the program and has said it will not seek reimbursem­ent for some $5 million in expenses incurred before WE withdrew from the deal in early July amid political controvers­y.

The organizati­on had already been struggling due to the pandemic-related shutdown but the questions about the student volunteer program prompted many of its corporate sponsors to cut their ties with the charity.

WE said Wednesday it plans to lay off 115 Canadian staff and sell all its property in Canada in the coming months, including its landmark $15-million Global Learning Centre

in downtown Toronto, which opened in 2017.

It follows news last month that WE would be laying off dozens of employees in Canada and the United Kingdom.

The net profits will be put in an endowment fund that will be overseen by a new board of governors and used to complete several projects in communitie­s in Latin America, Asia and Africa that were started by WE but remain unfinished.

The fund will also cover the operating costs of several large-scale infrastruc­ture projects, such as a hospital and college in Kenya and an agricultur­al centre in Ecuador. However, no new projects or programs will be launched.

All future WE Day events are also being cancelled. The organizati­on says it will no longer have staff to work with teachers, though existing resources will be digitized and available online. WE says it was active in 7,000 schools across Canada.

Shutting down its Canadian operations “shows just how much trouble WE was in and how badly they needed this bailout from their Liberal friends,” Angus said.

“They’ve have been in economic freefall for months. This was a group that fired its board of directors for asking too many questions about its finances. The question is why didn’t the government see this before handing them over a contract worth millions?”

 ??  ??
 ?? TheCanadia­nPress ?? Co-founders Craig, left, and Marc Kielburger introduce Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, as they appear at the WE Day celebratio­ns in Ottawa in 2015.
TheCanadia­nPress Co-founders Craig, left, and Marc Kielburger introduce Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, as they appear at the WE Day celebratio­ns in Ottawa in 2015.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada