National Post

Liberal MPS key to future of probe

Members mum on calling Dion to testify on SNC

- Joanna Smith

• Six Liberal MPS will be the ones to decide whether the federal ethics watchdog will speak publicly about his scathing report on how Prime Minister Justin Trudeau handled the SNCLavalin affair.

Conservati­ves and New Democrats pushed for the emergency meeting of the Commons ethics committee to be held Wednesday in Ottawa, where MPS will debate whether to dig deeper by inviting Ethics Commission­er Mario Dion to testify.

“Now we have facts,” said NDP MP Charlie Angus. “We should be able to ask the man who found those facts to explain them.”

The Liberals hold a majority on the 10- member committee. Voting in favour of the motion to invite Dion to appear would mean keeping the Snc-lavalin controvers­y in the headlines as MPS gear up for the Oct. 21 election.

None of the six Liberals on the committee had agreed to comment by late Tuesday afternoon.

The report, released last week, concluded Trudeau violated the Conflict of Interest Act by pressuring former attorney general Jody Wilson-raybould to end criminal proceeding­s on corruption charges against SNC.

Trudeau, who has defended himself by insisting he was acting in the best interests of Canadians, is now suggesting voters want to move on.

“Voters speak to me about jobs,” Trudeau said Tuesday in Trois- Rivières, Que., when asked whether he is hearing about SNC- Lavalin at his meet-and-greet events. “Yes, people have concerns, but mostly, they speak of the work that we are accomplish­ing together.”

Conservati­ve MP Peter Kent said he hopes his Liberal colleagues, at the very least, support inviting Dion to debrief the committee on his report.

Mary Dawson, the previous ethics commission­er, spent two hours answering questions about her December 2017 report that found Trudeau had violated the Conflict of Interest Act when he and his family when on vacation to a private island owned by the Aga Khan.

Kent said if the Liberals are concerned about the timing, they could have supported his efforts to investigat­e the scandal earlier this year. At the time, Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine- Smith said it would be “premature” to begin such a probe before the justice committee wrapped up its study.

Erskine- Smith had also pointed out Dion had begun investigat­ing and that he reports directly to the ethics committee. The committee should ensure he has what he needs to do his job, rather than do it for him, he argued at an April meeting.

In his report, Dion noted the confidenti­ality rules that govern cabinet documents and discussion­s prevented him from accessing everything he needed.

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