National Post

Answers absent in Norman affair

Liberals shut down inquiry

- Christie Blatchford

So here we all are, more than a week after the criminal charge against Vice-admiral Mark Norman was stayed.

The former second- incommand of the Canadian Forces is not yet back at work.

The all- party defence committee met Thursday upon a motion from Opposition members that the committee convene hearings and call witnesses into the government’s conduct and investigat­ion of Norman.

Naturally, the Liberal majority on the committee refused, just as the Liberal majority on the justice committee refused to reconvene to hear more evidence in the Snc-lavalin matter.

In the House, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau overseas and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan not in evidence, the remarkably ineffectua­l National Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthill­ier and Sajjan’s parliament­ary secretary, Serge Cormier, were left to “answer” queries.

“Answer” is in quotes because it appears no one in this government ever remotely even pretends to actually provide a responsive answer.

Similarly, Sajjan and Trudeau were also tragically unavailabl­e to be in the House Tuesday when MPS unanimousl­y passed a motion apologizin­g to Norman.

Both have declined opportunit­ies since to make their own apologies, odd especially for the PM, who after all has made saying sorry for the sins and policies of others and other government­s, some in power before he was born, part of his own darling brand.

Sajjan, whom you may wrongly remember as the Lion of Medusa ( in the spring of 2017, he told a crowd in Delhi that he was the “architect” of Canada’s largest battle in Afghanista­n, called Op Medusa, and later apologized for overstatin­g his role), has given every sign of adhering to the enduring Liberal tradition of throwing the least valuable/ quickly available person under the bus.

This week, Sajjan said that the decision to suspend Norman, more than a year before he was criminally charged, was made by Chief of Defence Staff Gen. Jon Vance.

Oh, he certainly supported it, Sajjan said, but it was Vance’s decision alone.

Now, let us cast our tiny minds back to January of 2017.

On Monday, Jan. 9 that year, Vance was briefed on the RCMP investigat­ion into Norman’s alleged conduct.

Vance then handed the Vice-admiral what’s called “a notice of intent,” alerting Norman that he might — operative word, might — be relieving him of military duty.

Then he went to brief Gerald Butts, at the time Trudeau’s principal secretary ( he resigned early on in the Snc-lavalin imbroglio), the PM’S then and current chief of staff Katie Telford and others.

That meeting, Vance testified in court during a motion in Norman’s case in January, started around 4 p.m. that day.

Then, Vance said, he got a phone call from the PM, who confirmed he’d been filled in.

Then Vance said he told Sajjan and his own chief of staff.

He took not one single note of any of these discussion­s.

And then he went out for dinner with Butts and Telford.

Four days later, on Friday, Jan. 13, Norman was formally suspended; it took effect Jan. 16.

I am no Ottawa sophistica­te, but my hunch is that if the Chief of Defence Staff often has meals with Butts and Telford, that’s pretty interestin­g.

And if he didn’t, and this was a one- off, then it’s even more interestin­g: Why, on this sad and unusual occasion, would Vance break bread with two intensely political animals in the PM’S office?

Vance testified, with a straight face, that “We did not discuss that ( the Norman suspension), I’m quite sure.”

Well, what the heck did they discuss?

( That wasn’t asked at the time because this wasn’t the trial itself, merely the defence third-party records motion.)

Those who are wiser in the ways of the national capital than I am struggle to believe that the CDS — any CDS, not just Vance — would make a decision to suspend Norman all on his own.

More likely, they suggest, is that he first ran it by either the prime minister or Sajjan.

Thus, when the PM et al say that the prosecutio­n wasn’t political, they cannot be taken seriously.

The decisions of the Public Prosecutio­n Service of Canada, first to charge Norman and then to stay the charge, were independen­t and made without the overt sort of PMO/ Privy Council Office interferen­ce that occurred in Snc-lavalin.

But this prosecutio­n was deeply political.

It was the Privy Council Office, which was the complainan­t, in that the PCO first investigat­ed the leak that so embarrasse­d the new government in November of 2015.

They found that there were six separate leaks of informatio­n around the very same meeting Norman was accused of leaking about and that 42 people knew the meeting was happening, and 73 who knew the outcome.

The PCO, headed of course by clerk Michael Wernick, then called in the RCMP, and in March of last year, more than a year after Norman had been suspended, they charged him with a single count of breach of trust.

Throughout, the PCO was the gatekeeper of records and documents, and it was the PCO that resisted disclosing to the defence ( and prosecutor­s) informatio­n that was critical to Norman’s defence and full prosecutor­ial understand­ing of the circumstan­ces.

The RCMP, which has of course defended its investigat­ion, failed for two years to ask witnesses it interviewe­d early on for the notes they mentioned they had, prompting one of them to come forward to the defence, so worried was she that they were missing out on key context.

The RCMP also failed to interview a single member of the former Stephen Harper government, though fully 11 of the dozen times Norman was alleged to have leaked informatio­n happened under the Conservati­ves’ watch.

Former defence minister Jason Kenney, his predecesso­r Peter Mackay ( at the time justice minister) and former veterans affairs minister Erin O’toole have publicly confirmed that this is so — they were interviewe­d only by defence lawyers and gave informatio­n that may have played a role in convincing prosecutor­s they had no reasonable shot at conviction.

At the time of Norman’s suspension, his departure was described as mysterious. No one knew what the precise allegation­s were. Thus the gravest reputation­al damage to Norman: To whom had he been leaking and what?

And as my Postmedia colleague David Pugliese reported last year, the government in November of 2017 refused Norman’s request for financial assistance, available under a special program for public servants with legal difficulti­es, because the government already had deemed him guilty.

As the Queen said in Alice in Wonderland, “Sentence first — verdict later.”

We did not discuss that (the Norman suspension), I’m quite sure.

 ?? Errol Mcgihon / Postmedia news ?? Vice-admiral Mark Norman arrives with lawyer Marie Henein as they hold a press conference in Ottawa last week.
Errol Mcgihon / Postmedia news Vice-admiral Mark Norman arrives with lawyer Marie Henein as they hold a press conference in Ottawa last week.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada