The Prince George Citizen

Gov’t to hold limited hearings on Wilson-Raybould affair

- Joan BRYDEN

OTTAWA — Liberals faced accusation­s of a coverup Wednesday after they agreed to hold limited committee hearings into an allegation that former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould was improperly pressured to help SNC-Lavalin avoid criminal prosecutio­n.

Their short list of three proposed witnesses does not include Wilson-Raybould, who resigned from cabinet Tuesday.

The five Liberal MPs on the House of Commons justice committee used their majority to block an opposition motion that would have seen the committee hear from nine key players in the controvers­y, including Wilson-Raybould, current Justice Minister David Lametti, clerk of the Privy Council Michael Wernick and senior aides in the Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office, including chief of staff Katie Telford and principal secretary Gerald Butts.

Liberals approved instead their own motion, which called on the committee to hear from just Lametti, Wernick and the deputy justice minister – although more could be added next week after getting legal advice, behind closed doors, on what steps the committee needs to take to avoid interferin­g with two ongoing court cases involving SNC-Lavalin. The Montreal engineerin­g giant has been charged with bribery and corruption involving contracts in Libya.

The Liberals defeated an attempt by New Democrat MP Nathan Cullen to strike a compromise of six witnesses, adding Butts and two other senior PMO aides who were heavily involved in the SNC-Lavalin file.

They also defeated a Conservati­ve motion calling on Trudeau to immediatel­y waive solicitor-client privilege, which WilsonRayb­ould has cited as preventing her from commenting on the allegation.

The Liberal motion calls on the committee to study the legal principles at the root of the controvers­y – including the recently added Criminal Code provision that made it legal to negotiate remediatio­n agreements in cases of corporate corruption, a form of plea bargain in which a company pays restitutio­n, but avoids criminal prosecutio­n that could bankrupt it.

The motion also included looking at the so-called Shawcross doctrine, which spells out the degree to which an attorney general may consult with cabinet colleagues about a prosecutio­n.

“That is not an investigat­ion, that is simply going through the motions,” Cullen said after the meeting, accusing the Liberals of “battening down the hatches” to prevent any truth from coming to light.

“Liberals seem to think that this should be just a sort of study group, a book club to look at all sorts of interestin­g ideas about the law rather than the scandal that’s right in front of Canadians.”

Conservati­ve MP Michael Cooper said the Liberals’ motion is “part of a coverup” and an attempt at creating “a diversion” with lengthy hearings on legal principles.

“At the end of the day, this is really not that complicate­d. This is about the fact that certain officials in the PMO were alleged to have put pressure on the former attorney general to interfere in a criminal investigat­ion, nothing more, nothing less... The Liberals aren’t interested in that. They’re interested in covering this up.”

Liberal MP Randy Boissonnau­lt, who proposed the successful motion, defended the Liberals’ refusal to call Wilson-Raybould to hear her side of the story. He said she’s bound by a rule that prohibits a former minister from commenting on her previous portfolio and by solicitor-client privilege, noting that Wilson-Raybould has hired a former Supreme Court justice to advise her on what she can say.

“I think it’s important for Ms. WilsonRayb­ould to speak to Canadians on her own terms. It doesn’t need to be something we do here at the justice committee,” he said.

Trudeau, meanwhile, was sticking to his message that Wilson-Raybould had a duty to speak up months ago if she had concerns about the way the government was handling the SNC-Lavalin case.

At a short appearance in Sudbury, Ont., Trudeau dodged a question about what reason Wilson-Raybould gave about why she resigned from cabinet, leaving the microphone rather than answering.

Wilson-Raybould was demoted to the veterans affairs post in a January cabinet shuffle. A Globe and Mail report, attributed to unnamed sources, last week alleged the PMO leaned on her instruct the director of public prosecutio­ns to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement with SNC-Lavalin.

Trudeau has denied any improper pressure was put on Wilson-Raybould and maintains she never mentioned any concern about that to him.

Prior to the committee meeting, Conservati­ve MP Lisa Raitt said if Liberals believe Trudeau, they should support “without hesitation” the opposition motion for a full investigat­ion into the affair.

“But if they defeat or they water it down in any way, it is nothing less than an admission of guilt.”

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer, who is touring New Brunswick, repeated the same message a short time later. He accused Trudeau of “trying to paint himself as the victim in all of this,” while “publicly impugning (Wilson-Raybould’s) character in a way that prevents her from speaking for herself.”

Raitt said the Conservati­ves will now pursue other options to get to the bottom of the matter.

Among the options, she mentioned a judicial inquiry or an investigat­ion by a Senate committee. She did not rule out asking the RCMP to investigat­e.

Federal ethics commission­er Mario Dion has initiated his own investigat­ion into the matter, specifical­ly whether there’s been a violation of the Conflict of Interest Act.

In the wake of the allegation­s and Dion’s review, SNC-Lavalin had its debt rating downgraded Wednesday by Standard & Poor’s to BBB- from BBB.

The agency cited the criminal charges against the engineerin­g and constructi­on giant and the possibilit­y of a 10-year ban from bidding on federal contracts among its reasons for the downgrade.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of Justice and then-attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould take part in the grand entrance prior to the final report of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion commission on Dec. 15, 2015 in Ottawa.
CP FILE PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Minister of Justice and then-attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould take part in the grand entrance prior to the final report of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion commission on Dec. 15, 2015 in Ottawa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada