Times Colonist

Privy Council clerk Wernick bows out

Top civil servant fourth to resign over SNC-Lavalin fallout

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — The SNC-Lavalin affair claimed its fourth resignatio­n Monday as Michael Wernick announced he will step down as the country’s top public servant, having concluded he’s lost the trust of opposition parties.

Opposition parties have been calling for the clerk of the Privy Council’s resignatio­n since he first rejected allegation­s that he and others improperly pressured former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to halt a criminal prosecutio­n of SNCLavalin. Wernick’s combative testimony to the House of Commons justice committee was denounced as partisan.

Also on Monday, the Liberals who make up a majority on that committee said publicly that they believe it has done all it can, or should, to investigat­e the affair.

In a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday, Wernick said he will retire before this fall’s federal election campaign kicks off. He noted that the clerk is supposed to be “an impartial arbiter of whether serious foreign interferen­ce” occurs during the campaign, as part of a new federal watchdog panel, and is also supposed to be ready to help whichever party is elected to form government — two roles he no longer believes he can fulfil.

“It is now apparent that there is no path for me to have a relationsh­ip of mutual trust and respect with the leaders of the opposition parties,” Wernick wrote. “I wish to relinquish these roles before the election. It is essential that Canadians continue to see their world-leading public service as non-partisan and there to provide excellent services to Canadians and the government­s they elect.”

Wernick, who has served in senior public service roles for nearly 38 years, has been clerk of the Privy Council since 2016, shortly after the Liberals assumed office. Government insiders have said he wanted to retire as clerk a year ago but was persuaded to stay on.

Wilson-Raybould accused Wernick of making “veiled threats” that she would lose her job as justice minister and attorney general if she didn’t cave in to pressure last fall from Trudeau and his senior staff to halt the criminal prosecutio­n of SNC-Lavalin on charges of bribery and corruption related to contracts in Libya. She said they pushed her to instruct the director of public prosecutio­ns to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement with the Montreal engineerin­g giant, which would have forced the company to pay stiff penalties but let it avoid the risk of a criminal conviction that could threaten its financial viability.

Wernick has denied the accusation and maintained that all concerned acted with the highest standards of integrity.

Wilson-Raybould’s concerns about undue pressure surfaced publicly after she was moved out of the justice portfolio to Veterans Affairs in a mid-January cabinet shuffle. She resigned from cabinet a month later. Her exit was followed by the departure of Trudeau’s principal secretary, Gerald Butts, and then the resignatio­n from cabinet of Jane Philpott, who cited loss of confidence in the government’s handling of the SNC-Lavalin affair.

Wernick’s decision to quit as well proves “this SNC-Lavalin scandal is even bigger than we thought,” said Conservati­ve MP Pierre Poilievre.

Trudeau said he intends to name Ian Shugart, currently deputy minister of foreign affairs, to replace Wernick.

On his way into the House of Commons, Trudeau thanked the clerk for his “extraordin­ary service to Canada over many, many decades” and credited his government’s accomplish­ments “definitely in large part” to Wernick’s leadership of the public service. Trudeau did not respond when asked if he had sought Wernick’s resignatio­n, but his office later said he had not.

Wernick’s letter was released minutes before MPs reconvened for their first question period after a two-week March break, an exchange that proved explosive almost from the get-go.

Opposition members erupted in protest when Trudeau announced that he has appointed former Liberal justice minister Anne McLellan as a special adviser to explore what he called “important questions” about the relationsh­ip between the federal government and the minister of justice, who plays a dual role as attorney general. While the justice minister is a political player, the attorney general is supposed to make independen­t, impartial decisions about prosecutio­ns.

McLellan “will assess the structure that has been in place since Confederat­ion, of a single minister holding the positions of minister of justice and attorney general of Canada,” the prime minister said in a statement. “She will consider whether machineryo­f-government or legislativ­e changes may or may not be recommende­d.”

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer mocked the announceme­nt as nothing more than saying “Liberals will investigat­e Liberals.”

NDP MP Charlie Angus ridiculed the idea of a Liberal minister from the era of the sponsorshi­p scandal looking into the SNC-Lavalin affair, “a fivealarm dumpster fire.”

 ??  ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, and Michael Wernick, clerk of the Privy Council, take part in Monday’s ceremony at Rideau Hall in which Joyce Murray was sworn in as president of the Treasury Board.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, and Michael Wernick, clerk of the Privy Council, take part in Monday’s ceremony at Rideau Hall in which Joyce Murray was sworn in as president of the Treasury Board.

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