The Province

PM ON OFFENSIVE

- MAURA FORREST mforrest@postmedia.com Twitter: MauraForre­st

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau went on the offensive Tuesday evening after former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould’s sudden resignatio­n from cabinet.

In his strongest statement to date, Trudeau repeatedly said he was “surprised and disappoint­ed” by Wilson-Raybould’s decision, which came amid allegation­s she was pressured by the Prime Minister’s Office to help constructi­on giant SNC-Lavalin avoid criminal prosecutio­n.

Trudeau claimed her resignatio­n was “not consistent” with conversati­ons they had recently.

“In regards to the matter of SNC-Lavalin, let me be direct,” he told reporters in Winnipeg.

“The government of Canada did its job and to the clear public standards expected of it. If anyone felt differentl­y, they had an obligation to raise that with me. No one, including Jody, did that.”

It was a marked change in tone for Trudeau, who just one day earlier had painted a rosy picture of his relationsh­ip with Wilson-Raybould, suggesting her presence at the cabinet table was proof all was well. She resigned from cabinet hours later.

Following the resignatio­n of Canada’s first Indigenous justice minister, several Indigenous groups, including the Assembly of First Nations, raised concerns about Wilson-Raybould’s departure from the cabinet of a government that has touted its commitment to reconcilia­tion.

“When I sought federal elected office, it was with the goal of implementi­ng a positive and progressiv­e vision of change on behalf of all Canadians and a different way of doing politics,” she wrote in her resignatio­n letter, dated Feb. 12 and published Tuesday morning on her website.

“My resignatio­n as a minister of the Crown in no way changes my commitment to seeing that fundamenta­l change achieved. This work must and will carry on.”

She added, “Regardless of background, geography or party affiliatio­n, we must stand together for the values that Canada is built on.”

The letter did not explain why she was stepping down. Wilson-Raybould, who represents a Vancouver riding, accepted the position of veterans affairs minister last month after being shuffled out of the justice portfolio, a move widely seen as a demotion. Her departure from cabinet follows a Globe and Mail report last Thursday citing unnamed sources who said the PMO pushed Wilson-Raybould to direct federal prosecutor­s to negotiate a deal with SNC-Lavalin, known as a deferred prosecutio­n agreement, that would have led to a fine instead of a criminal trial, but she refused.

The Quebec company was charged in 2015 with bribing Libyan officials between 2001 and 2011 in exchange for constructi­on contracts. Postmedia has not independen­tly confirmed the allegation­s of political interferen­ce.

Trudeau said he accepted Wilson-Raybould’s resignatio­n Monday night.

Earlier on Monday, Trudeau had told reporters in Vancouver that he had “full confidence in Jody” and had met with her twice since landing in the city on Sunday.

“In our system of government, of course, her presence in cabinet should actually speak for itself,” he said.

He also claimed she’d reminded him of a meeting they’d had last fall, in which he’d assured her that decisions involving federal prosecutio­ns were hers alone.

Trudeau has said the allegation­s in the Globe and Mail story are false.

Wilson-Raybould has said little about the issue, citing solicitor-client privilege.

In her resignatio­n letter, she said she was consulting former Supreme Court justice Thomas Albert Cromwell to obtain “advice on the topics that I am legally permitted to discuss in this matter.”

On Tuesday, Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer renewed his call for the prime minister to waive his privilege and allow Wilson-Raybould to speak freely.

“Justin Trudeau’s ethical lapses and his handling of this latest scandal have thrown his government into chaos,” Scheer said.

“The longer he refuses to do this, the more guilty he appears to Canadians.”

“Yesterday, he said that her presence (in cabinet) speaks for itself. Well, today, her resignatio­n speaks for itself.”

Scheer also demanded that the government retain all documents “relating to the ongoing SNC-Lavalin affair.”

 ?? — THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists his government acted properly on SNC-Lavalin.
— THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Prime Minister Justin Trudeau insists his government acted properly on SNC-Lavalin.

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