The Daily Courier

As inquiry decision looms, here’s how Canada’s saga has evolved

- By DAVID FRASER

OTTAWA — Special rapporteur David Johnston is expected to release his decision today on whether the federal Liberals should call a public inquiry on foreign interferen­ce.

With allegation­s that China meddled in the last two federal elections dominating the political conversati­on for months, experts say an inquiry would allow for a detailed, transparen­t conversati­on about what kind of threat Canada is actually facing.

It would also allow the Liberal government to demonstrat­e that it is doing more to address the issue, they say.

Johnston’s recommenda­tion on the inquiry is set to come as part of an initial report about how the government should proceed with the allegation­s of interferen­ce. The former governor general is scheduled to give a news conference at noon on Tuesday upon releasing the report publicly.

In what many saw at the time as too little, too late, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tapped Johnston in March to lead an investigat­ion into the extent and impact of foreign interferen­ce in Canada.

The federal government said it gave Johnston access to classified documents and Canada’s security agencies to conduct that work.

Though opposition parties had by then been clamouring for a formal public inquiry for weeks, Trudeau said Johnston would have until late May to decide whether it was warranted. He would have until the end of October to produce a final report.

The pressure has not abated since then.

“The way that the conversati­on has evolved over the past few months has really aggravated and made more stark partisan divides in the country,” said University of Ottawa professor Artur Wilczynski.

“That, in my opinion, has not contribute­d to an effective defence of Canadian democracy and has not contribute­d to an effective government­al response to the threats of foreign interferen­ce.”

Wilczynski, who spent more than 30 years in the public service working on foreign policy, intelligen­ce, security and defence issues, said an inquiry would help bring the conversati­on back around to the details of the foreign interferen­ce threat itself and how Canada should position itself to combat that threat.

The signs that foreign interferen­ce was happening – and getting worse – were already in plain sight well before the current controvers­y began.

Officials in Canada knew the 2016 American election was subject to foreign interferen­ce attempts.

And for years, the Canadian Security Intelligen­ce Service has been warning of growing concern in its annual reports.

But a series of reports by the Globe and Mail and Global News beginning last fall, many of which cited unnamed security sources, brought new attention to the issue.

The reports alleged that specific influence attempts had taken place in

the 2019 and 2021 federal elections.

“Despite various attempts by officials to talk about foreign interferen­ce, the only thing that prompted a real fundamenta­l conversati­on about foreign interferen­ce were the illegal leaks,” Wilczynski said.

When a Global News report was published in November that alleged China was funding campaigns through an illegal network of donors, Trudeau and his officials said they had no knowledge of specific candidates receiving backing by Beijing.

But the government began showing signs that it was reframing its approach to China.

A week after the allegation­s emerged, Trudeau’s office said the prime minister raised concerns about “interferen­ce” with Chinese President Xi Jinping face-to-face at the G20 summit.

Later the same month, Canada released an Indo-Pacific strategy that dedicated a slice of its $2.3 billion value to combating foreign interferen­ce.

And before November ended, thenRCMP commission­er Brenda Lucki confirmed an ongoing investigat­ion into broad foreign interferen­ce allegation­s.

Still, the calls for further scrutiny were amplified as more reports emerged, including a February story from the Globe and Mail that asserted the Chinese government sought to defeat Conservati­ve politician­s in the 2021 election who were considered unfriendly to the regime.

By the time Trudeau announced in early March that a special rapporteur would be named – and that investigat­ions by the National Security and Intelligen­ce Committee of Parliament­arians and the National Security and Intelligen­ce Review Agency would begin – the writing was on the wall.

His political opponents already saw any action other than an independen­t public inquiry as far too little.

A parliament­ary committee passed a non-binding motion calling on the government to begin one.

“It’s created a huge political drama for the Liberal government and put it on the defensive, certainly,” said Wesley Wark, a senior fellow with the Centre for Internatio­nal Governance Innovation.

“The Liberal government has struggled to come up with a convincing portrait of the actions and policies it has taken to respond forcefully to foreign interferen­ce. It clearly has done some things, but it hasn’t been enough.”

Since Trudeau named Johnston as the special rapporteur in mid-March, the government promised funding to combat foreign interferen­ce in its 2023 budget, launched consultati­ons on a foreign agent registry and ordered security agencies to improve their reporting mechanism up to the political level.

But even as the Liberals sought to show they were working on the issue, still more reports emerged that ramped up the pressure.

Days after Johnston’s appointmen­t – which itself was controvers­ial, since Conservati­ves accused him of being too close to Trudeau – MP Han Dong announced he was leaving the Liberal caucus.

Global News had published a story citing unidentifi­ed security sources who alleged Dong told a Chinese diplomat in February 2021 that releasing Michael Kovrig and Michael Spavor would benefit the Conservati­ves.

The two Canadian men had been detained in China since December 2018, just over a week after the RCMP arrested Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou in Vancouver on a U.S. extraditio­n warrant.

Global had previously published allegation­s that Dong benefited from Chinese foreign interferen­ce in his successful bid to become the Liberal candidate for his riding in 2019.

Dong has denied the allegation­s and is suing Global over its reporting.

Early this month, the Globe and Mail reported that Conservati­ve MP Michael Chong and his relatives in Hong Kong had been targeted by the Chinese government via a Torontobas­ed diplomat.

Chong said he confirmed that allegation was contained in a CSIS intelligen­ce assessment that had reached officials in the Privy Council Office, while Trudeau denied that the informatio­n about the alleged threat had ever reached his office.

Canada expelled the accused Chinese official. China responded by expelling a Canadian diplomat. And this week, the public safety minister ordered security agencies to ensure that any future threats against parliament­arians, their families or their staff are communicat­ed at the political level.

For Wilczynski, this latest chapter in the story has brought home the tangible implicatio­ns of foreign meddling.

It was one thing for people to imagine that an electoral candidate might have received financial support from people linked to a foreign regime. It was another to think about allegation­s that a parliament­arian’s family members were being actively threatened.

This “crystalliz­ed for Canadians in a very robust way what the scope of the threat is,” he said.

It’s against that backdrop that Johnston is now expected to recommend the government’s best course of action.

Formal hearings would give elections officials, political parties, parliament­arians, provinces, communitie­s and other actors a voice, Wilczynski said – “and in a thoughtful way talk about what the threat is, and what their experience­s are.”

Trudeau has said he will abide by Johnston’s recommenda­tions, including if he recommends a public inquiry. It’s a big burden to bear, Wark noted. “Johnston’s been thrust out in front of this problem. And he will take the heat.”

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David Johnston

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