Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tories seek Trudeau family's speaking records

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2020 05:16 PM
  • Tories seek Trudeau family's speaking records

A second House of Commons committee is debating whether to probe the aborted deal between the federal government and WE Charity to run a massive student-volunteering program.

WE gave up running the $912-million program amid controversy over hundreds of thousands of dollars in fees the WE organization paid to members of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's family for appearances at WE events.

Trudeau has said he should have recused himself from the decision but didn't.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau, one of whose daughters works for an arm of the WE organization, has said the same.

Conservatives on the Commons ethics committee say they want copies of all records related to any speaking appearances involving Trudeau, his wife, his mother or his brother.

The Tories say the committee needs to understand how well the government's conflict-of-interest regime works and the WE Charity deal presents a case study.

"Let's put some sunlight on this," said Ontario Conservative MP Michael Barrett, his party's ethics critic, as the meeting began.

According to WE, most of the fees went to Trudeau's mother Margaret, a mental-health advocate, for events between 2016 and 2020, and Justin Trudeau has never been paid anything.

Quebec Liberal MP Brenda Shanahan argued the ethics committee is not an investigative body. It broadly oversees the work of people such as federal ethics commissioner Mario Dion, she said, but doesn't do probes itself.

Dion is investigating Trudeau and Morneau in the affair, to determine whether they violated the Conflict of Interest Act.

Shanahan said that's the way the probe should be carried out.

"Is that really the way we want to go? Investigate everyone publicly? When there are other tools available?" she asked.

Thursday, the Commons finance committee heard from Youth Minister Bardish Chagger and senior public servants about how the arrangement with WE came together after Trudeau announced plans in April for a volunteering program for students who couldn't find work this summer because of COVID-19.

That committee heard WE pitched the government on a different but related project days before the announcement, and officials saw the group's connections with young people as vital to making the government's program work.

MORE National ARTICLES

Delay unreasonable in murder case: top court

Delay unreasonable in murder case: top court
The Supreme Court of Canada has upheld a judge's decision to halt a murder case because of excessive delay, even though the accused man was long ago deported from Canada.

Delay unreasonable in murder case: top court

Morneau to unveil wage subsidy changes

Morneau to unveil wage subsidy changes
Finance Minister Bill Morneau will outline today how the federal government is reshaping its emergency wage-subsidy program that has been extended to the end of the year.

Morneau to unveil wage subsidy changes

COVID-19 Outbreak in the Neonatal Unit at St. Paul's Hospital

COVID-19 Outbreak in the Neonatal Unit at St. Paul's Hospital
According to a release from Vancouver Coastal Health an outbreak of COVID-19 has taken place in the NICU at St. Paul's Hospital. The NICU is designed for newborns at the hospital. 

COVID-19 Outbreak in the Neonatal Unit at St. Paul's Hospital

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence
Metro Vancouver Transit Police say a woman travelling on a Surrey bus received multiple threats of sexual violence. According to Transit Police the woman was on a bus that had just departed Newton Exchange with about 15 other passengers on July 14 around 11 pm when she received the threatening messages to her phone via AirDrop.

Women on Surrey bus receives threats of sexual violence

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record
Another record for monthly overdose deaths related to illicit drugs has been set in British Columbia, prompting the former provincial health officer to call for radical steps to reduce fatalities including access to pharmaceutical-grade heroin produced in Canada.

B.C. sets one-month overdose death record

Hospitality workers fear long-term unemployment

Hospitality workers fear long-term unemployment
The union representing hospitality workers across the country says it fears staff laid off because of COVID-19 may not have a job when the pandemic is over.

Hospitality workers fear long-term unemployment

PrevNext