Journal Pioneer

Trudeau acknowledg­es ‘erosion of trust’ between office and former minister

- KRISTY KIRKUP MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tried to put the SNC-Lavalin affair behind him Thursday, attributin­g the controvers­y to a breakdown between his staff and former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould, accepting a share of the blame and promising to do better.

But he continued to insist nothing unethical or illegal occurred and did not offer an apology for his handling of the matter, which has cost him two cabinet ministers and his most trusted adviser.

“Over the past months, there was an erosion of trust between my office and specifical­ly my former principal secretary and the former minister of justice and attorney general,” Trudeau told an early-morning news conference. “I was not aware of that erosion of trust. As prime minister and leader of the federal ministry, I should have been.”

Last week, Wilson-Raybould told the House of Commons justice committee that she was relentless­ly and inappropri­ately pressured last fall by Trudeau, his senior staff, the top public servant and others to intervene to stop a criminal prosecutio­n of SNC-Lavalin. WilsonRayb­ould said she believes she was moved to the veterans affairs portfolio in January as punishment for refusing to give in.

She resigned from cabinet altogether a month after accepting the new post. This week, her close friend and cabinet ally, Treasury Board president Jane Philpott, resigned over what she called her own loss of confidence in how the prime minister had handled the SNC affair.

On Wednesday, Trudeau’s former principal secretary, Gerald Butts — who also resigned in the midst of the controvers­y — offered an account different from Wilson-Raybould’s. He told the justice committee that everyone in the Prime Minister’s Office recognized that the decision on whether to intervene was Wilson-Raybould’s alone, that there was no improper pressure and that she never raised a complaint about it until after Trudeau told her she was being moved out of her “dream job.” Butts said all they wanted was for Wilson-Raybould to seek an outside legal opinion on the matter from an eminent retired judge.

After all that, Trudeau said the testimony has revealed a “difference in perspectiv­e” on conversati­ons that took place “among colleagues about how to tackle a difficult issue.” It’s not a question of telling the truth versus lying, he suggested.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer called Trudeau’s performanc­e “a completely phoney act of fake sincerity” and repeated his call for the prime minister to resign.

“The truth cannot be experience­d differentl­y. There is such a thing as right and wrong and a real leader knows the difference,” Scheer said in Toronto. “The Justin Trudeau we saw today is the real Justin Trudeau — a prime minister who can’t manage his own office, let alone the affairs of a great nation.”

Similarly, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said “there’s not two versions of this story” and reiterated his call for a public inquiry.

Singh also said Trudeau was not taking responsibi­lity or offering an apology.

Trudeau addressed WilsonRayb­ould’s accusation that he injected partisan considerat­ions into a Sept. 17 discussion about the prosecutio­n of SNC-Lavalin on charges of bribery and corruption related to contracts in Libya. The engineerin­g giant is headquarte­red in Montreal and she maintains Trudeau pointed out that’s where his own Papineau riding is.

Trudeau didn’t deny that but said it was not intended as a partisan comment. Rather, he was doing his job as an MP for an area that could be affected by a criminal conviction for SNC-Lavalin, which might threaten SNCLavalin’s financial viability and throw thousands of employees out of work.

“I was preoccupie­d by the number of jobs on this in Quebec and across the country. This was something I was clear on.”

Wilson-Raybould has said she made a final decision on the matter on Sept. 16 and informed Trudeau of that during their meeting the following day, after which she maintains no one should have continued to pressure her on the issue. Trudeau said he asked his staff to follow up after his meeting with her because he believed she was still open to considerin­g new arguments.

“I now understand that she saw it differentl­y,” he said.

Trudeau accepted responsibi­lity for not following up with Wilson-Raybould after their one conversati­on about SNC-Lavalin, but he also put some responsibi­lity on her for the breakdown in communicat­ion.

“One of the things central to my leadership is fostering an environmen­t where my ministers, caucus and staff feel comfortabl­e coming to me when they have concerns. Indeed, I expect them to do so,” he said. “In Ms. Wilson-Raybould’s case, she did not come to me and I wish she had because if it’s a real relationsh­ip and we are truly a team, we can always acknowledg­e when we need to make adjustment­s.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau concludes his news conference in Ottawa on Thursday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau concludes his news conference in Ottawa on Thursday.

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