Times Colonist

NDP’s Garrison introduces bill to repeal anti-terror C-51

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OTTAWA — A Vancouver Island New Democrat MP has followed through on a promise to table a private member’s bill to repeal controvers­ial anti-terrorism measures.

NDP public safety critic Randall Garrison, MP for Esquimalt-SaanichSoo­ke, said the omnibus security legislatio­n known as Bill C-51 infringes on the liberties of Canadians without making people safer.

The legislatio­n gave the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service more power to thwart suspected terrorist plots — not just gather informatio­n about them.

It also expanded the sharing of federal security informatio­n, broadened no-fly list powers and created a new criminal offence of encouragin­g someone to carry out a terrorism attack.

The previous Conservati­ve government introduced the legislatio­n early last year, less than three months after jihadi-inspired attacks that killed Canadian soldiers in St-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Que., and Ottawa just days apart.

The NDP staunchly opposed the bill, but it became law with support from the Liberals, who promised during the subsequent election campaign to change what they call “problemati­c elements.”

The Liberal government recently announced a wide-ranging consultati­on on national security, saying the Conservati­ves failed to properly consider public views before rushing ahead with C-51.

Garrison chided the Trudeau government for lack of action.

“They’ve turned all their promises into discussion points,” he said Monday. “And so we’re nowhere near actually having something concrete to discuss in the House.”

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