Kenney blames bureaucrats for ruse
OTTAWA — A fake citizenship ceremony broadcast last fall on Sun News was the result of “logistical problems,” Immigration Minister Jason Kenney said Thursday in the House of Commons, amid much laughter.
Under fire during question period after departmental emails detailing the hoax surfaced, Kenney ignored opposition requests to apologize for the ruse, blamed it on public servants in his department and urged Canadians to look past it.
“The department organizes dozens of special citizenship and reaffirmation ceremonies every year which, I think, are a great way of highlighting the value of Canadian citizenship,” he said, noting he only caught wind of the incident this week. “It turns out in the ceremony in question … some of the people invited didn’t arrive. I think the response to that was poorly handled. I regret that, but we shouldn’t allow it to undermine the important value of these special citizenship and reaffirmation ceremonies.”
According to the emails, released under access to information laws, Sun Media wanted to hold a short ceremony that involved just the citizenship oath and a maximum of 10 people in its small studio as part of Citizenship Week last October.
Government officials cautioned such events were only conducted in exceptional circumstances as citizenship ceremonies are very “special” for those involved and should take place in the company of friends and family.
Officials suggested the broadcaster attend one of 13 already scheduled off-site ceremonies but the network rejected the idea.
“Let’s do it. We can fake the oath,” said a Sun staffer whose name was blacked out.
Bureaucrats instead pitched a reaffirmation ceremony, but had trouble tracking down new immigrants to take part as many indicated they couldn’t take time off work.
In the end, six federal bureaucrats were asked by the department to stand in “so that we’d have the right numbers,” according to one email.
Footage from the event, however, shows the broadcaster ended up passing off the reaffirmation as a true citizenship ceremony.
“What the minister should have done is tell any news outlet that wants to fake a story to go jump in a fake lake,” NDP immigration critic Don Davies retorted following Kenney’s response in a reference to the controversial, $57,000 fake lake prop purchased for the G8 Summit in Muskoka in 2010. “Instead they played along, once again putting Conservative photo ops ahead of getting things done for Canadians,” the Opposition MP said.