Penticton Herald

Johnston advises against foreign interferen­ce inquiry

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OTTAWA — Special rapporteur David Johnston said Tuesday that a formal inquiry into foreign interferen­ce is not needed, that public hearings should be held as part of his own mandate.

Johnston said an inquiry could not be undertaken in public because of the sensitivit­y of the intelligen­ce involved, and formal subpoena powers are not required for him to hold his own hearings with diaspora communitie­s, academics and political stakeholde­rs.

The former governor general’s initial report into foreign interferen­ce allegation­s found serious issues in how intelligen­ce from security agencies was communicat­ed to government but didn't identify any instances where the prime minister negligentl­y failed to act on intelligen­ce, advice or recommenda­tions.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau asked Johnston in March to lead an investigat­ion into the extent of foreign interferen­ce in Canada, amid allegation­s that China meddled in the last two federal elections.

“There are serious shortcomin­gs in the way intelligen­ce is communicat­ed and processed from security agencies through to government, but no examples have been identified of ministers, the prime minister or their offices knowingly or negligentl­y failing to act on intelligen­ce, advice or recommenda­tions,” Johnston's report said.

It said there is a “lack of accountabi­lity” about who is receiving what intelligen­ce, a situation that is not acceptable given the current threat environmen­t. Johnston’s report also concluded, based on access to classified documents and security agencies, that specific accusation­s of interferen­ce that have dominated the political conversati­on were less concerning than media reports suggested.

“When viewed in full context with all of the relevant intelligen­ce, several leaked materials that raised legitimate questions turn out to have been misconstru­ed in some media reports, presumably because of the lack of this context,” it said, pointing to reports from Global News and the Globe and Mail.

Johnston said an inquiry digging into the allegation­s would have to take place almost entirely behind closed doors.

The report warned that excessive partisansh­ip in the way the issue is discussed is making the country more vulnerable to external threats.

Opposition Conservati­ves have been clamouring for an inquiry.

Party Leader Pierre Poilievre had refused to meet with Johnston, describing the role of special rapporteur as a “fake job.”

In a statement on Tuesday reacting to the report, Poilievre called the investigat­ion process “rigged from the start” and said it has “zero credibilit­y.”

Poilievre said Johnston is “shamefully helping the prime minister cover up Beijing’s attacks on our democracy. This is outrageous, but not surprising.”

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