Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Opposition Mps Seize On Aga Khan Vacation Again To Attack Trudeau, Liberals

Darpan News Desk, 11 Apr, 2017 12:13 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's controversial New Year's family vacation at the Aga Khan's private island in the Bahamas has opposition MPs riled up once again.
     
    Trudeau weathered a barrage of questions from interim Conservative leader Rona Ambrose and Opposition House leader Candice Bergen about the latest cost estimates for the trip, which included a pricey ride on the Aga Khan's private helicopter.
     
    The Opposition seized on a CBC report that found a Privy Council Office technician was able to travel to the island by way of a commercially chartered seaplane, undermining Trudeau's own argument that the helicopter was his only option.
     
    CBC says the government's initial $127,187 cost estimate for the trip did not include another $6,695 for the seaplane voyage.
     
    Trudeau responded only with his standard reply: that it was a private family vacation that he's happy to discuss with the federal ethics commissioner.
     
    Government House leader Bardish Chagger, who absorbed a number of the opposition missives with Trudeau sitting right next to her, cited security rules that made it impossible for the prime minister to get to the island any other way.
     
    Security rules mean the prime minister isn't allowed to travel without a security detail, nor are the prime minister and his family allowed to take commercial flights.
     
    That means they must fly on government aircraft.
     
    Ever since early January, the vacation has embroiled Trudeau in an ethics probe and exposed his government to attacks about overspending on government entitlements — long a Liberal Achilles' heel.
     
    The federal ethics watchdog is looking into the trip to see if Trudeau violated guidelines for ministers when he vacationed on a private island owned by the Aga Khan and took the spiritual leader's private helicopter as part of the visit.
     
    More than half the cost _ about $72,000 _ was for an RCMP security detail to accompany Trudeau and his family on the winter getaway, a cost the government has said would have been incurred regardless of where the prime minister vacationed.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Flummoxed By Letter From Canada Revenue Agency Declaring Him Dead

    Man Flummoxed By Letter From Canada Revenue Agency Declaring Him Dead
     A 64-year-old New Brunswick man says he is very much alive, despite being declared dead by the Canada Revenue Agency.

    Man Flummoxed By Letter From Canada Revenue Agency Declaring Him Dead

    Matt Whitman, Halifax City Councillor, Accused Of Racism After 'Chinese Fire Drill' Video

    Matt Whitman, Halifax City Councillor, Accused Of Racism After 'Chinese Fire Drill' Video
     Police say they are looking into a video of a Halifax councillor and provincial Progressive Conservative candidate leaping from a car and laughing as he yells, "Chinese fire drill!" amid accusations that it is racially insensitive.

    Matt Whitman, Halifax City Councillor, Accused Of Racism After 'Chinese Fire Drill' Video

    Parole Board Denies Release To Man Who Kidnapped Girl From Calgary Mall

    Parole Board Denies Release To Man Who Kidnapped Girl From Calgary Mall
    Calgary radio station CHQR says it has learned that sex offender John Francis Dionne will be staying behind bars for at least another couple of years.

    Parole Board Denies Release To Man Who Kidnapped Girl From Calgary Mall

    Don't Mess With Our Stretch: Airline Faces Social Media Wrath From ‘Leggings’ Wearers

    Don't Mess With Our Stretch: Airline Faces Social Media Wrath From ‘Leggings’ Wearers
    The incident, with United's Twitter account chiming in, rolled right on through to Monday, prompting debate on whether leggings are "pants."

    Don't Mess With Our Stretch: Airline Faces Social Media Wrath From ‘Leggings’ Wearers

    2 Canadians Win Gairdner Awards For Contributions To Medical Science

    2 Canadians Win Gairdner Awards For Contributions To Medical Science
    TORONTO — Two Canadian researchers are among the winners of this year's Gairdner Awards, which recognize some of the most significant medical discoveries made by scientists around the globe.

    2 Canadians Win Gairdner Awards For Contributions To Medical Science

    Most Patients Get Priority Surgeries Like Joints, Cataracts Within Target Wait Times

    Most Patients Get Priority Surgeries Like Joints, Cataracts Within Target Wait Times
    A report by the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), released Tuesday, provides a snapshot of patient wait times for five priority medical procedures in 2016 and compares them to data for the previous four years.

    Most Patients Get Priority Surgeries Like Joints, Cataracts Within Target Wait Times