Toronto Star

A promising minister’s fall from grace

Seen as a bridge-builder, Wilson-Raybould is now mired in controvers­y

- MIA RABSON THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— As the frigid air of an Ottawa winter howled outside in January 2013, Jody WilsonRayb­ould stood at the centre of a mass of national media, trying to be a peacemaker as First Nations chiefs from across the country battled over how to secure a meeting with the sitting government on their terms.

Some wanted to reject a meeting with then-prime minister Stephen Harper, because they felt their talks should be directly with the Crown or its representa­tive in Canada at the time, David Johnston, the governor general. Wilson-Raybould was the British Columbia regional chief for the Assembly of First Nations, and she was going to build a bridge between the chiefs, and then between the chiefs and a government many felt was hostile to Indigenous issues.

When the meeting with Harper finally happened, she would later say, she realized change was going to be easier if she was on the inside. So she ran for the Liberals in the 2015 election and won in a downtown Vancouver riding.

Shortly afterward, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau named her Canada’s justice minister.

Fast forward six years, and in the frigid air of another Ottawa January, Wilson-Raybould was grim as she faced the reality that three years after getting one of the highest portfolios in Trudeau’s cabinet, she was being demoted.

With the enthusiasm of a child being asked to apologize for stealing a cookie, she delivered the agreed-upon line, that moving from Justice to Veterans Affairs was not a negative, that there was “no world” in which serving Canada’s veterans had a downside.

Less than a month later, Wilson-Raybould is at the centre of one of the biggest storms to hit the Trudeau government: allegation­s the prime minister or his aides pressured her to help Quebec corporate giant SNCLavalin avoid a criminal prosecutio­n, and demoted her at least partly because she wouldn’t co-operate.

Trudeau has flatly denied the allegation­s.

The fear of reprisal for speaking about anything to do with the situation was running so high Friday that most Liberals approached flatly refused.

Treasury Board President Jane Philpott, said to be one of Wilson-Raybould’s closest friends and allies in cabinet, was not available.

But there is another view of her from outside government that is far more flattering, a descriptio­n of a woman who is exceptiona­lly smart and exceptiona­lly driven.

Born into a political family, her father, Chief Bill Wilson, once told Pierre Trudeau, fa- ther of Justin, that his daughters were going to be prime ministers one day.

Her relationsh­ip with her father is sometimes troubled, and one Indigenous source said it is “impossible to talk about Jody without talking about her dad.”

Bill Wilson, who issued words of support for his daughter on social media last week, helped get Indigenous title to land and treaty rights enshrined in the Constituti­on.

Wilson-Raybould does leave a significan­t legacy as justice minister. She shepherded two of the biggest changes to Canadian social policy in a generation: physician-assisted dying and legalized marijuana.

“She’s very serious, she’s very credible,” said Sheila North, former grand chief of the Manitoba Keewatinow­i Okimakanak, the northern Manitoba chiefs’ organizati­on.

She is bare-legs-in-minus-30C-wind chill tough — that’s how she publicly accepted her new job outside Rideau Hall — a former B.C. Crown prosecutor who is assertive and knows her own mind. Any criticism of Wilson-Raybould for sticking up for her conviction­s, North said, is rooted in sexism.

“Someone who is very strong and assertive, when it’s a male, it’s not even considered anything that’s negative,” she said.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Jody Wilson-Raybould was demoted from justice to veterans affairs minister for being a thorn in the side of cabinet, insiders say.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Jody Wilson-Raybould was demoted from justice to veterans affairs minister for being a thorn in the side of cabinet, insiders say.
 ??  ?? Chief Bill Wilson has been supportive of his daughter on social media.
Chief Bill Wilson has been supportive of his daughter on social media.

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