The Daily Courier

Johnston was already set to testify at committee before opposition demanded he appear

- By MICKEY DJURIC

OTTAWA — A parliament­ary committee chair says foreign interferen­ce watchdog David Johnston was already scheduled to testify before opposition MPs demanded his appearance in a letter this week.

Liberal MP Bardish Chagger said at a hearing yesterday that the committee invited Johnston to appear two months ago, and he is already scheduled to appear in less than two weeks.

Opposition members of the committee wrote a letter this week demanding Johnston’s testimony after his first report on alleged foreign meddling was published Tuesday.

The Conservati­ve, NDP and Bloc Quebecois MPs said they want Johnston to explain why he decided against recommendi­ng a public inquiry on foreign meddling.

Liberal MPs accused Conservati­ves of being irresponsi­ble by implying that there was any reluctance on Johnston’s part to talk to the committee.

Chagger said Johnston has agreed to testify for two hours on June 6, including about the contents of his report.

NDP MP Rachel Blaney told the committee that she’s not content with Johnston’s report, as her party continues to push for a public inquiry.

“For me, the focus has always been how serious this is and how important it is for Canadians to trust their institutio­ns,” Blaney said. “It’s disappoint­ing that we’re here, and really outlines the reality that Canadians need to see a process that is transparen­t, clear and they can have trust in. This process is not feeling (like) that.”

Johnston said that a formal public inquiry would not work to investigat­e issues of alleged foreign interferen­ce in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections because much of the classified informatio­n he has reviewed would need to remain secret.

He said in his report that making that informatio­n public would run the risk of breaching the trust of Canada’s security allies and endangerin­g intelligen­ce sources.

Opposition parties have continued calling for a public inquiry in the wake of that report, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he is abiding by Johnston’s recommenda­tion not to hold one.

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