Times Colonist

Opposition livid as Liberals shut down SNC-Lavalin probe

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — The federal Liberaldom­inated justice committee of the House of Commons pulled the plug Tuesday on its probe of the SNC-Lavalin affair, prompting fresh howls of opposition outrage and a walkout by Conservati­ve MPs from the government’s budget presentati­on later in the day.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of “thumbing his nose” at Canadians. NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh pushed for a public inquiry. The Conservati­ves compared the Liberals to the rights-abusing regimes in Venezuela and Russia, which Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland called insulting.

Trudeau accused the Conservati­ves of trying to avoid talking about the budget and their own “failed” approach to the economy — one he said is rooted in the 10 years of Tory government under Stephen Harper.

The real fireworks blew up when Finance Minister Bill Morneau prepared to unveil the Liberals’ pre-election budget later in the day. The Conservati­ves forced a vote on a motion to allow MPs on the fisheries committee to travel, on which a number of Tory MPs voted both for and against.

They then rose, one by one, afterward to apologize for voting twice, each managing to work in a denunciati­on of the Liberals’ refusal to recall former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to the committee. “Let her speak” was the refrain.

Some points of privilege and points of order followed, eating up more time. Morneau finally started speaking at 2 p.m. PDT, an hour later than scheduled, but was drowned out by opposition MPs chanting, “Let her speak!”

Commons Speaker Geoff Regan’s calls for order were not heeded. Conservati­ve MPs eventually walked out of the Commons, after Scheer delivered a parting shot, calling the committee’s decision “an assault on democracy.”

The opposition’s anger reached a boil when Conservati­ve and New Democrat MPs failed to persuade the Commons justice committee Tuesday morning to recall Wilson-Raybould so she could shed more light on the SNC-Lavalin controvers­y.

The Liberal majority on the committee shut down the fiveweek inquiry during a closeddoor meeting that opposition MPs wanted to be open. The Liberal members then presented a motion calling for the committee to begin a study of the rise of hate crimes in Canada.

Montreal-based SNC-Lavalin finds itself at the centre of a national political storm over allegation­s prime ministeria­l aides crossed a line in leaning on Wilson-Raybould to help the company avoid criminal prosecutio­n on corruption charges.

Liberals on the justice committee wrote to the chairman, fellow Liberal Anthony Housefathe­r, on Monday night to say the committee had done its job and should move on to other business.

“As committee members, we have achieved our objectives with respect to these meetings,” the letter says. “Following the testimony of all witnesses, we believe that all rules and laws were followed. Canadians now have the necessary informatio­n to arrive at a conclusion.”

Liberal committee member Randy Boissonaul­t reiterated the contents of the letter following the meeting, saying Tuesday’s session was the 10th in five weeks, amounting to 13 hours of testimony given by 10 witnesses.

“We have heard from many of the key players in this matter,” he said.

The Liberals said the federal ethics commission­er, who has launched a probe of the SNCLavalin matter, is best suited to investigat­e the controvers­y.

They said former justice minister Anne McLellan has been appointed to explore the relationsh­ip between the government and the minister of justice, who plays a second role as attorney general. While the justice minister is a political player, the attorney general is supposed to make independen­t, impartial decisions about prosecutio­ns.

But the opposition would have none of it.

Victoria NDP MP Murray Rankin called it “yet another effort to change the channel” by the government.

SNC-Lavalin faces legal trouble over allegation­s that it paid millions of dollars in bribes to obtain government business in Libya.

The company unsuccessf­ully pressed the director of public prosecutio­ns to negotiate a “remediatio­n agreement,” a legal means of holding an organizati­on to account for wrongdoing without a formal finding of guilt.

The director told SNC-Lavalin in October that negotiatin­g a remediatio­n agreement would be inappropri­ate in this particular case.

Wilson-Raybould has told the justice committee she was relentless­ly pressured to ensure the Montreal engineerin­g giant was invited to negotiate an agreement. She was shuffled from the justice portfolio in January, becoming veterans affairs minister. While she called the pressure “inappropri­ate,” she has also said she doesn’t believe anything illegal occurred.

Trudeau has denied that any undue pressure was placed on Wilson-Raybould.

 ??  ?? Victoria NDP MP Murray Rankin: “Yet another effort to change the channel.”
Victoria NDP MP Murray Rankin: “Yet another effort to change the channel.”

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