Medicine Hat News

Spy agency told election chief of possible meddling in nomination, inquiry hears

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Chief electoral officer Stephane Perrault says Canada’s spy agency told him during the 2019 general election about possible foreign meddling in a political nomination contest.

A document tabled Thursday at a commission of inquiry into foreign interferen­ce says Perrault decided at that point no action could be taken on the issue in the Toronto riding of Don Valley North.

As head of Elections Canada, Perrault is responsibl­e for ensuring Canadians can exercise their democratic rights to vote and be a candidate.

The document, a summary of the commission’s classified interview with Perrault, says he noted that participat­ion in a nomination contest is not regulated in the same way as an election.

Perrault also pointed out that no complaints had been lodged by other participan­ts in the nomination contest.

A 2023 media report alleged that China interfered with the nomination of Han Dong as the Liberal candidate in Don Valley North in 2019.

At the inquiry Thursday, Perrault was asked whether the matter brought to him by the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service involved the Liberal party’s nomination contest.

Perrault said he was not authorized to go beyond what was stated in the document.

In the interview with the commission, he said that following the 2019 election, a nomination contest report audit was conducted as part of the usual process.

The file was referred to the Office of the Commission­er of Canada Elections, which conducts investigat­ions, for reasons apparently unrelated to the allegation of interferen­ce, such as accuracy, completene­ss or missed filing deadlines.

A heavily redacted document tabled Thursday said CSIS spoke with the commission­er’s office in 2019 concerning allegation­s of irregulari­ties in

Don Valley North.

The inquiry hearings are delving into alleged interferen­ce by China, India, Russia and others in the 2019 and 2021 general elections.

Overall, Perrault told the inquiry he has confidence in the integrity of the last two elections with respect to his mandate.

In his report last May, David Johnston, a special rapporteur appointed by the government to look into possible foreign meddling, said irregulari­ties were observed with Dong’s nomination in 2019.

Johnston said there was “well-grounded suspicion” that the irregulari­ties were tied to the Chinese consulate in Toronto, with whom Dong maintained a relationsh­ip.

However, Johnston found no evidence Dong was aware of the irregulari­ties or the consulate’s potential involvemen­t in his nomination.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was briefed about the irregulari­ties, although no specific recommenda­tion was provided, Johnston added. “He concluded there was no basis to displace Mr. Dong as the candidate for Don Valley North. This was not an unreasonab­le conclusion based on the intelligen­ce available to the prime minister at the time.”

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