National Post

Court orders lobbying czar to look at gift to PM

Judge finds first analysis of vacation flawed

- Jim Bronskill

• The Federal Court has ordered the lobbying commission­er to take another look at whether the Aga Khan broke the rules by giving Prime Minister Justin Trudeau a vacation in the Bahamas.

In September 2017, then-commission­er Karen Shepherd said there was no basis to a complaint from an unnamed member of the public that the Aga Khan, a billionair­e philanthro­pist, had violated the code for lobbyists by allowing Trudeau and his family to stay on his private Caribbean island.

Shepherd’s office found no evidence the Aga Khan was “remunerate­d for his work” as a director of a foundation registered to lobby the federal government, and therefore concluded the code did not apply to his interactio­ns with Trudeau.

Although democracy Watch was not the original complainan­t, the Ottawa-based group challenged the ruling in Federal Court.

democracy Watch argued Shepherd should have considered that as a board member of the Aga Khan Foundation Canada, the spiritual leader of the world’s Ismaili Muslims was directly and legally connected to the organizati­on bearing his name and was acting as its representa­tive in giving a gift to the prime minister.

In his decision made public this week, Federal Court Justice Patrick Gleeson noted the commission­er concluded there was no evidence the Aga Khan was “remunerate­d” for his work with the foundation. However, the Lobbying Act sets out obligation­s that lobbyists incur when they undertake activities “for payment” — a term defined in the act as including “anything of value.”

The commission­er’s analysis does not consider whether the Aga Khan may have received anything of value, but begins and ends with the simple question of monetary payment, Gleeson said. restrictin­g the analysis to this narrow question is inconsiste­nt with both the wording of the act and the objects and purposes of the code, he added.

In addition, the analysis excluded any considerat­ion of possible compliance issues relating to the foundation, its senior officer or its other registered lobbyists.

The commission­er was required to take a broad view of the circumstan­ces in addressing the complaint, Gleeson said.

“Instead, the record before the Court reflects a narrow, technical and targeted analysis that is lacking in transparen­cy, justificat­ion and intelligib­ility when considered in the context of the Commission­er’s duties and functions,” he wrote. “The decision is unreasonab­le.”

Gleeson directed Nancy Belanger, who was appointed as the new lobbying commission­er in december 2017, to re-examine the matter.

Speaking after an event Tuesday in Kitchener, Ont., Trudeau said he had trust in “the processes in place” and respected the coming review by the commission­er.

In december 2017, Mary dawson, federal ethics commission­er at the time, found Trudeau contravene­d four sections of the Conflict of Interest Act in relation to the Christmas 2016 vacation. She found the holiday could reasonably be seen as a gift designed to influence the prime minister.

Opposition parties argued Trudeau should refund the treasury for all or part of the transporta­tion and security costs related to the trip.

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