Waterloo Region Record

Ethics watchdog starts full probe of Morneau’s involvemen­t in pension bill

- The Canadian Press

OTTAWA — Federal ethics watchdog Mary Dawson is launching an examinatio­n of Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s involvemen­t in a pension bill that could have benefited a company in which he owned some $21 million worth of shares.

In a letter to NDP ethics critic Nathan Cullen, Dawson says she believes she has “reasonable grounds” to commence an examinatio­n of Morneau’s conduct.

The letter points to a section of the Conflict of Interest Act that empowers the ethics commission­er to examine a matter if she has reason to believe a public office holder has contravene­d the act.

Cullen had asked Dawson to investigat­e whether Morneau was in a conflict of interest when he sponsored Bill C-27.

Dawson had initially said she’d look into the matter and follow up with Morneau; she’s now upgraded that to a full-blown examinatio­n.

Bill C-27 would allow pension administra­tors to convert direct benefit pension plans to targeted benefit plans — a change for which Morneau had lobbied when he was the head of Morneau Shepell, a pension administra­tion and human resources company founded by his father.

When Morneau introduced the bill a year ago, he still held millions worth of shares in the company.

It emerged last month that, based on Dawson’s advice, Morneau had not divested or placed those shares in a blind trust. Rather, he followed her recommenda­tion that the “best measure of compliance” would be to set up a conflict of interest screen that was supposed to prevent him from being involved in discussion­s or decisions that could benefit him through his stake in Morneau Shepell.

Morneau has said he didn’t need to recuse himself from C-27 because the bill is of general applicatio­n and not specific to Morneau Shepell.

Conservati­ve finance critic Pierre Poilievre, who has also asked Dawson to investigat­e, scoffed at the notion.

It was meant to apply in situations where, for instance, the health minister improves the health care system and consequent­ly gets better treatment in hospital, as would any Canadian. That could not be considered a conflict of interest, Poilievre said in an interview on Friday.

By contrast, he said a targeted pension plan is a “highly specialize­d product” that Morneau Shepell was instrument­al in helping New Brunswick to set up. Having a finance minister who holds shares in Morneau Shepell sponsor a bill that would allow for similar plans nationwide is “fairly specific as opposed to general.”

Cullen argues that the value of Morneau Shepell shares rose in the days following the introducti­on of C-27, earning the minister some $2 million in just five days.

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The federal ethics watchdog says she believes she has “reasonable grounds” to commence an examinatio­n of Bill Morneau’s conduct under the Conflict of Interest Act.
SEAN KILPATRICK, THE CANADIAN PRESS The federal ethics watchdog says she believes she has “reasonable grounds” to commence an examinatio­n of Bill Morneau’s conduct under the Conflict of Interest Act.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada