Vancouver Sun

THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT HAS HANDED OVER THOUSANDS OF PAGES OF DOCUMENTS RELATED TO THE WE SCANDAL TO A HOUSE COMMITTEE. OPPOSITION CRITICS WORRY VETTING OF THE DOCUMENTS COULD GO TOO FAR.

Committee will get redacted versions

- LEE BERTHIAUME

OTTAWA • The federal Liberal government has handed over thousands of pages of documents related to the WE controvers­y to a House of Commons committee, which lawyers are now vetting for personal informatio­n and cabinet secrets.

The finance committee demanded the documents last month as it probes whether Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s relationsh­ip with WE Charity influenced the government’s ill-fated decision to have the organizati­on run a federal student-volunteer program.

Committee members are hoping the documents will shed light on the discussion­s that led to the decision to have WE run the Canada Student Services Grant, before the deal was cancelled amid controvers­y in early July.

“People are asking a lot of questions,” NDP finance critic Peter Julian said in an interview. “There’s been a lot of contradict­ions in testimony. So the documents should be revealing a lot more of what the real answers are.”

Yet while the Liberals turned more than 5,000 pages over to the committee ahead of Saturday’s deadline, it wasn’t clear when they would be released to members as committee lawyers go through them to prevent the release of protected informatio­n.

“We don’t know,” Conservati­ve finance critic Pierre Poilievre said during a news conference on Sunday when asked when committee members would get the documents. “We have asked. They have not given us the timeline.”

Committee chairman Wayne Easter predicted the documents would be released in the coming days to members as additional lawyers from the public service have been brought in to help review them for cabinet secrets and other informatio­n.

Even after the documents are released, however, there will could be disagreeme­nts about why certain informatio­n was withheld.

While Poilievre and Julian suggested they were keeping the door open to challengin­g any redactions, Easter said the vetting was being conducted by the profession­al public service — and noted the tradition of Parliament respecting cabinet confidence.

Usually prepared for ministers to aid government deliberati­ons and decision-making, documents marked as cabinet confidence­s hold closely guarded political secrets and are legally protected from unauthoriz­ed release.

Trudeau has previously faced pressure to waive cabinet confidence when it came to allegation­s he tried to pressure then-justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould on a deferred prosecutio­n agreement with Quebec engineerin­g firm SNCLavalin.

“We respect the integrity of the public service,” Easter said when asked about the lawyers redacting cabinet confidence­s in the WE documents. “That’s why there is no political involvemen­t in the redacting of these documents. That’s why the law clerk is involved.”

The Liberals have been embroiled in controvers­y since it was revealed on June 25 that WE had been selected to run the Canada Student Services Grant, which promised up to $5,000 toward the education costs of students who volunteere­d during COVID-19.

The sole-sourced agreement with WE was to pay one of its foundation­s up to $43.5 million to administer a grant program designed to encourage students to sign up for volunteer work related to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau have since apologized for not recusing themselves from cabinet’s discussion­s about the agreement before it was awarded to WE given their respective families’ ties to the Toronto-based charity.

Trudeau has spoken at six WE Day events since becoming prime minister,

THERE IS NO POLITICAL INVOLVEMEN­T IN THE REDACTING OF THESE DOCUMENTS.

while his mother and brother have been paid almost $300,000 and reimbursed about $200,000 in expenses for appearing at WE events. Trudeau’s wife has also had expenses covered.

Morneau, meanwhile, acknowledg­ed last month that he repaid WE about $41,000 in sponsored travel for him and his family to view the charity’s humanitari­an projects in Ecuador and Kenya in 2017.

Yet the government has insisted that the decision was based on a recommenda­tion from the non-partisan public service following its conclusion that WE was the only organizati­on capable of running the grant program.

Opposition critics, meanwhile, are also training their sights on an agreement between a Crown corporatio­n and a company employing the husband of Trudeau’s chief of staff, Katie Telford.

The agreement between the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp. and MCAP, where Telford’s husband Rob Silver is an executive vice-president, involves the administer­ing of a rent-assistance program for small businesses affected by COVID-19.

The Prime Minister’s Office has said Telford establishe­d clear ethical walls between herself and MCAP in January, even before COVID-19 shook the country’s economy and led to the creation of the Canada Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance program.

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