The Niagara Falls Review

Wilson-Raybould speaks to cabinet, still member of Liberal caucus

- MIA RABSON

OTTAWA — Former cabinet minister Jody Wilson-Raybould says she’s still talking to her lawyer about what she can and can’t say publicly about allegation­s she was pressured to avert a criminal trial for Quebec engineerin­g giant SNC-Lavalin.

Wilson-Raybould made the remarks Tuesday as she exited the suite of offices in Parliament’s West Block that hold both the cabinet room and the Prime Minister’s Office, just as a cabinet meeting was breaking for the day.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on his way into the House of Commons that she had asked to speak to cabinet, but he would not say what they discussed and stressed all cabinet conversati­ons are confidenti­al.

Wilson-Raybould resigned as veterans-affairs minister a week ago. Her resignatio­n came several days after anonymous allegation­s were made to the Globe and Mail newspaper that the Prime Minister’s Office had tried to convince her to allow SNC-Lavalin to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement as a way to avoid the company’s criminal prosecutio­n.

The implicatio­n was that her refusal to agree led to her January demotion from the moresenior justice portfolio to veterans affairs.

On Tuesday, however, she said she was still a member of the Liberal caucus.

“I am still consulting with my legal counsel, as I think people can appreciate, or should appreciate, the rules and laws around privilege, around confidenti­ality, around my responsibi­lity as a member of Parliament,” she said.

“My ethical and profession­al responsibi­lities as a lawyer are layered and incredibly complicate­d so I am still working with my lawyer.”

Trudeau has acknowledg­ed there were conversati­ons with her about the case, but that he told her the decision was hers to make, and she was not being directed to do anything.

On Monday, the controvers­y led to the resignatio­n of Trudeau’s principal secretary, Gerald Butts. Butts denied he had done anything wrong but said he had become a distractio­n for the government so he was stepping aside.

Wilson-Raybould has hired former Supreme Court justice Thomas Cromwell to advise her about what solicitor-client privilege can allow her to say.

Cabinet met Tuesday for the first time since the allegation­s broke.

The House of Commons justice committee agreed last week to study the affair, but the Liberaldom­inated committee initially declined to invite Wilson-Raybould to appear.

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