Saskatoon StarPhoenix

ETHICS COMMISSION­ER TRYING TO SHIELD PROBES SLAMMED

Watchdog wants investigat­ions to be confidenti­al

- Jim Bronskill

CANADIANS HAVE EVERY RIGHT TO LEARN ABOUT THIS … AND TO JUDGE FOR THEMSELVES.

OTTAWA • Pro-transparen­cy groups are panning the new federal ethics watchdog’s suggestion that he should be able to prevent the media from reporting on his investigat­ions.

In testimony at a House of Commons committee this week, conflict of interest and ethics commission­er Mario Dion said that for many Canadians an allegation against a public office holder is akin to a finding of wrongdoing.

Dion floated the notion he be given authority to issue confidenti­ality orders to stop parliament­arians from talking about a complaint and to prevent media outlets from reporting on it.

Weakening transparen­cy and keeping Canadians in the dark won’t solve the problem Dion identifies, said Duncan Pike, co-director of Canadian Journalist­s for Free Expression.

“And certainly public confidence in the conflict-of-interest laws in the system that he administer­s and oversees would certainly not be enhanced by delay of informatio­n and a lack of transparen­cy,” Pike said in an interview.

“Canadians have every right to learn about this informatio­n and to judge for themselves.”

Limiting media coverage of ethics probes could have the unintended effect of shielding Dion’s own office from scrutiny, he added.

“If any real move was made to bring these kind of powers that he suggests, we would very, very much oppose that.”

In December, Dion’s predecesso­r, Mary Dawson, found Prime Minister Justin Trudeau contravene­d four sections of the Conflict of Interest Act in relation to his vacation on a private island owned by the Aga Khan.

The investigat­ion stemmed from a family vacation from Dec. 26 to Jan. 4 which probably would have remained a private affair had it not been revealed by the National Post.

Once it became public, the Opposition charged that the hospitalit­y extended by the Aga Khan might be deemed to be a gift that could reasonably be seen to have influenced Trudeau in the exercise of his official duty.

Trudeau later said, “I’m sorry I didn’t [check with the commission­er before booking the vacation], and in the future I will be clearing all my family vacations with the commission­er.”

If Dion tries to limit media coverage of matters under investigat­ion, “just about every free-expression group in the country will oppose it at every turn,” predicted Nick Taylor-Vaisey, president of the Canadian Associatio­n of Journalist­s.

Press freedom decisions should not be based on “whether or not there will be a positive or negative reaction” from the public, he said.

Duff Conacher, a founder of the group Democracy Watch, wondered if Dion could back up his assertion that publicity about an alleged ethical breach makes people think a politician is guilty.

“Where is the evidence of that? Some tweets from some extreme partisans?”

Democracy Watch is asking the Federal Court of Canada to overturn Dion’s appointmen­t, alleging the Liberal cabinet failed to consult opposition party leaders as required by the Parliament of Canada Act before naming him to the post.

Chantal Gagnon, a spokeswoma­n for the Prime Minister’s Office, had no comment Friday on Dion’s remarks.

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