Close X
Thursday, October 31, 2024
ADVT 
National

Conservatives Plot Political Assault On Harjit Sajjan With Symbolic Confidence Motion

Darpan News Desk, 08 May, 2017 12:21 PM
    OTTAWA — Harjit Sajjan will find himself back in the spotlight and on the hot seat today as the Conservatives use their so-called opposition day to renew their attacks against the defence minister's credibility.
     
    Conservative defence critic James Bezan says he will table a non-binding motion in the House of Commons expressing a loss of confidence in Sajjan, and which MPs will have a chance to vote on.
     
    That vote will be entirely symbolic, and has little chance of passing given the Liberals hold a majority of seats in the House, but it could still make for another long day for the embattled defence minister.
     
    Sajjan, a former soldier and Afghan war veteran, has faced sustained fire for having exaggerated his role in Operation Medusa, a key battle involving the Canadian Forces in Afghanistan in 2006.
     
    The defence minister has since apologized, but the Conservatives continue to call for his resignation, accusing Sajjan of a pattern of misleading comments that they say have hurt his standing with the military.
     
    That includes his assertions about the urgent need for Super Hornet fighter jets and that allies didn't object when Canada withdrew its CF-18s from Iraq.
     
    They have also asked Speaker Geoff Regan to rule on whether Sajjan misled members of Parliament when he blamed the previous government for cutting the tax benefits available for Canadian soldiers in Kuwait.
     
    "Some would say this is just politics," Bezan said. "This is more than that. It is quite troubling that we have a minister of national defence who has a track record of being untruthful."
     
    Sajjan's spokeswoman, Jordan Owens, said the minister will make a brief appearance and address in the House of Commons on Monday, but that he is more focused on the Liberal government's forthcoming new defence policy.
     
    "While the opposition chooses to focus on a mistake for which Minister Sajjan has already apologized, our government continues to deliver results for Canadians, especially our women and men in uniform," Owens said in an email.
     
    "We look forward to the upcoming release of Canada's new defence policy, which will present a plan to care for our military personnel and their families."
     
    On Sunday, Transport Minister Marc Garneau was dispatched in Sajjan's stead to talk about the coming defence policy on television political shows, presumably part of a Liberal strategy to keep the focus on policy and off Sajjan's credibility.
     
    Garneau told CTV's Question Period the new defence policy will be aimed redressing years of chronic under-funding of the military by successive governments. He said it will involve "significant expenditures" but refused to elaborate.
     
    In addition to the Conservative non-confidence motion Monday, the NDP is expected to pile onto Sajjan as well by raising questions about how much he knew about the mistreatment of Afghan detainees more than a decade ago.
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair has asked the ethics commissioner to take another look into whether Sajjan was in a conflict of interest when he rejected calls for an inquiry into the Afghan detainee issue last year.
     
    Mulcair says Sajjan's comments on Operation Medusa call into question his previous assertion to ethics commissioner Mary Dawson that he was not involved in, nor had any knowledge, about Afghan detainees.
     
    Dawson has said she is reviewing Mulcair's request.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies
    Police say he was one of three people hurt in two separate collisions on 64th Avenue on Wednesday night.

    17-Year-Old Youth Injured In Multi-Vehicle Collision In Surrey Dies

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows
    Surrey RCMP advises that multiple search warrants were executed in mid-April at properties alleged to be involved in the street level drug trade. 

    Surrey Drug Bust Results In 13 Arrests, Seizure Of Handguns And Crossbows

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation
    Justice Gary Weatherill ruled Gerry Taft defamed Devin Kazakoff when he called him a convicted felon who had extreme positions on animal rights issues on a website based in Cranbrook, B.C.

    British Columbia Court Says Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft Must Pay $75,000 For Defamation

    Storms, Spring Runoff Combine To Cause Washouts, Raise Flood Risk In B.C.

    Environment Canada has posted severe thunderstorm watches for a large section of British Columbia's central and southern Interior, an area that is already seeing spring flooding.

    Storms, Spring Runoff Combine To Cause Washouts, Raise Flood Risk In B.C.

    Brothers Aged 6 And 8 Crash Parents' Truck At Tim Hortons In Jarvis, Ont.

    Provincial police say the boys took the pickup truck around 7 a.m. Thursday to go to the restaurant to get some breakfast.

    Brothers Aged 6 And 8 Crash Parents' Truck At Tim Hortons In Jarvis, Ont.

    Conservatives Want Trudeau To Go To Manitoba Border To See Crossings First Hand

    Conservatives Want Trudeau To Go To Manitoba Border To See Crossings First Hand
    EMERSON, Man. — Two Conservative members of Parliament are calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to visit the Manitoba border to get a first hand look at the influx of refugee claimants.

    Conservatives Want Trudeau To Go To Manitoba Border To See Crossings First Hand