National Post

OTTAWA AIMS TO CREATE REGISTRY

Tabled bill includes reforms to CSIS act

- CATHERINE LÉVESQUE

OTTAWA • The federal government tabled a bill on Monday to implement a package of reforms to better combat foreign interferen­ce, including the much-awaited foreign agent registry and changes to legislatio­n surroundin­g Canada’s spy agency.

Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc introduced An Act Respecting Countering Foreign Interferen­ce. The bill was put on the House of Commons’ notice paper in the hours following Justice Marie-josée Hogue’s interim report on foreign interferen­ce.

Leblanc said last week that the foreign agent registry would be “coming soon” and that the government would announce a “broader review of the CSIS Act” as part of its “ongoing effort to strengthen legislatio­n with respect to foreign interferen­ce.”

The proposed legislatio­n amends the CSIS Act, the Security of Informatio­n Act, the Canada Evidence Act and the Criminal Code to create new offences related to foreign interferen­ce, such as engaging in deceptive conduct at the direction of a foreign entity with the intent of influencin­g “the exercise of a democratic right in Canada.”

It also enacts the Foreign Influence Transparen­cy and Accountabi­lity Act, which would see the appointmen­t of a new commission­er to establish and oversee a publicly accessible registry of the political and government­al lobbying happening in relation to foreign states.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau committed to bringing in such a registry more than a year ago, after months of media leaks from Global News and the Globe and Mail detailing the extent of China’s attempts to meddle in Canadian affairs.

In April 2023, former Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said it was “urgent” to fix the gaps in Canada’s foreign interferen­ce defences before the next election.

The United States has had a foreign-agent registry since 1938, whereas Australia implemente­d its own system in 2018. The United Kingdom passed its national-security bill last year, but many aspects of the law are expected to come into effect in 2024.

Last year, former clerk of the Privy Council’s Office Michael Wernick urged MPS to “go to Google, get the U.K. National Security Bill ... and copy and paste it and bring it to Canada,” adding that the legislatio­n could probably be adopted before the end of the year.

Since then, Mendicino was booted from cabinet with Leblanc taking his job, and he was busy negotiatin­g a path forward for a public inquiry with opposition parties. The Hogue commission is now underway, with a final report expected before the end of 2024.

It is not the first time that MPS have attempted to implement a foreign agent registry. Former Conservati­ve MP Kenny Chiu tabled a bill in the last Parliament to create a registry to ensure more transparen­cy about attempts at political lobbying in Canada by foreign states, but he was targeted by falsehoods that led to him losing his seat in 2021.

Chinese-language news outlets and social media messaging falsely claimed that Chiu’s bill would force any individual or group with ties to China to register as foreign agents and accused Chiu of being racist and fostering an “anti-china” sentiment.

Hogue’s interim report, released on Friday, revealed that some of the news outlets had been identified by intelligen­ce agencies as having close links to the Chinese government or Chinese state media.

Chiu told the commission that some of his Chinese constituen­ts who had supported him in 2019 would not speak to him anymore and shut the door in his face. He also said that Chinese volunteers stopped coming forward to help with his campaign.

Also on Monday, Liberal MP Sukh Dhaliwal presented a private member’s motion on political interferen­ce, violence or intimidati­on on Canadian soil in relation to the murder of Sikh leader Hardeep Singh Nijjar, who was a resident of his riding in British Columbia.

“It is crucial that we come together to condemn this heinous crime, support the grieving family and stand up for the principles of rule of law,” said Dhaliwal.

On Friday police in B.C. announced they had arrested three Indian nationals living in Edmonton and charged them with Nijjar’s murder. They also said they are investigat­ing if the Indian government was involved, an allegation raised by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in the House of Commons last year.

Dhaliwal’s motion asks that the House of Commons recognize that “recent events, including the credible allegation­s of a link between agents of the Government of India and the killing of a Canadian citizen … are examples of rising forms of intimidati­on, threats and interferen­ce from countries such as India, China, Russia, Iran and others.”

 ?? SPENCER COLBY / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc said last week that a foreign-agent registry to combat election interferen­ce would be “coming soon.”
SPENCER COLBY / THE CANADIAN PRESS Public Safety Minister Dominic Leblanc said last week that a foreign-agent registry to combat election interferen­ce would be “coming soon.”

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