The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Controvers­y may destroy charity, brothers say

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI POSTMEDIA NEWS

OTTAWA – The Kielburger brothers say the WE organizati­on they built up “like a small little house” as teenagers is facing financial ruin because of controvers­y over a federal government student volunteer program.

During a combative and occasional­ly chaotic four-hour hearing before the federal finance committee, Marc and Craig Kielburger blamed “misreprese­ntations” by the media, critics and politician­s for the controvers­y in which they’ve been embroiled for the past month.

“This has been something that may destroy 25 years of work to build a national charity in this country, partially because of mistakes that we made, we acknowledg­e and we apologize. But frankly, significan­tly because of inaccurate and false informatio­n is circulated to the advantage of various groups,” Craig Kielburger told parliament­arians.

Both brothers faced widerangin­g questions from Liberal and opposition MPs regarding their ties with the Trudeau government, WE’s “labyrinth” corporate structure and how they managed to win a deal with the federal government to manage a student volunteer grant program worth up to $912 million.

Over the past month, the ethics commission­er announced he is investigat­ing both Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau for their involvemen­t in the decision to outsource the Canada Student Service Grant (CSSG) to WE Charity Foundation. WE pulled out of the June 23 agreement earlier this month, after a week of controvers­y.

Both men and their families have close ties to WE. The Toronto-based organizati­on has paid for speeches by Trudeau’s wife, mother and brother in the last decade, whereas one of Morneau’s daughters currently works for the organizati­on.

Morneau also admitted to reimbursin­g $41,000 last week in unpaid travel expenses to WE for sponsored travel back in 2017.

In response to questions by Conservati­ve MPs, the Kielburger­s stated that they had no record of payments to the prime minister’s mother, Margaret Trudeau, before November 2015, that is when Justin Trudeau was elected to this country’s highest office.

“Our needs continued to grow and we needed somebody to speak on the issue of mental health. Madame Trudeau came as somebody who’s very focused on that issue,” Marc Kielburger responded to Conservati­ve MP Michael

Barrett.

From their opening statements, it was clear the Kielburger­s were in crisis management mode and that they consider themselves and WE as collateral damage of a political scandal. They also denied any link between the CSSG deal and ties between Liberal politician­s and WE.

“The fall-out now from this political process has resulted in serious challenges that risk the entire organizati­on and 25-years of work,” Craig Kielburger mentioned in his opening remarks. He later referred to WE as a “small little house” his brother Marc and him started building up at ages 17 and 12 respective­ly.

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