Truro News

NDP MP to table bill to repeal C-51

Says Liberals are dragging feet on reform

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A New Democrat MP says he will table a private member’s bill at the earliest opportunit­y to repeal controvers­ial anti-terrorism measures – accusing the Trudeau government of moving too slowly on planned reforms.

NDP public safety critic Randall Garrison says the security legislatio­n known as Bill C-51 severely compromise­d the rights of Canadians while doing little to improve safety.

The bill 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 Conservati­ve government introduced the omnibus bill early last year after jihadi-inspired attacks that killed Canadian soldiers in St-Jeansur-Richelieu, Que., and Ottawa just days apart in October 2014.

It became law with the support of the Liberals, who have promised to change what they call “problemati­c elements.” The NDP opposed the bill as a gross infringeme­nt on civil liberties.

At a news conference, Garrison chided the Trudeau government for lack of “substantiv­e action” since the October election.

“The government should focus on counter-radicaliza­tion efforts and providing security agencies with enough resources to fight threats,” he said.

But rescinding Bill C-51 would be the best place to start, Garrison added.

The Liberals have committed to a handful of specific changes as well as a wide-ranging review of national-security measures that will involve public consultati­ons. The government has pledged to ensure all CSIS warrants respect the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

This would likely roll back C-51 provisions allowing the spy service to disrupt terror plots through tactics that breach the charter as long as a judge approves.

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