Monday, April 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ben Chin, Morneau's Chief Of Staff, To Join PMO On Friday As Senior Adviser

The Canadian Press, 15 May, 2019 05:37 PM

    OTTAWA — Finance Minister Bill Morneau's former chief of staff Ben Chin will start a new job as a senior adviser to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau this week.


    Before joining Morneau's office in fall 2017, the veteran political aide worked for former British Columbia premier Christy Clark and former Ontario premier Dalton McGuinty.


    Chin, a former TV journalist, will be reporting to Trudeau's chief of staff Katie Telford starting Friday.


    He has spent much of his political career out of the headlines — but over the winter his name came up during testimony by former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould about the SNC-Lavalin affair.


    Wilson-Raybould asserted that Chin warned her staff about the political impact of potential job losses during a Quebec provincial election if the embattled Montreal-based engineering firm was unable to secure a plea-bargain-type deal with prosecutors over alleged corruption in Libya.


    Morneau has insisted Chin didn't do anything inappropriate in discussing the SNC-Lavalin case with Wilson-Raybould's staff.


    The company is facing a possible 10-year ban from lucrative federal government contracts because of 2015 bribery and fraud charges.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Heat Wave Sets 15 Temperature Records Thursday; More Set To Fall

    B.C. Heat Wave Sets 15 Temperature Records Thursday; More Set To Fall
    Fifteen temperature records were broken in British Columbia Thursday and several more could fall Friday as a heat wave settles across the province.

    B.C. Heat Wave Sets 15 Temperature Records Thursday; More Set To Fall

    B.C. Boosts Public Education, Enforcement For Renters And Landlords

    B.C. Boosts Public Education, Enforcement For Renters And Landlords
    British Columbia's government says it's increasing public education and bolstering enforcement to better protect the rights of both renters and landlords.

    B.C. Boosts Public Education, Enforcement For Renters And Landlords

    Wildlife Advocate Questions Decision To Kill Pigeons Pooping On Saskatoon Bridge

    SASKATOON — Crews tasked with cleaning a Saskatchewan bridge are in for a dirty job.

    Wildlife Advocate Questions Decision To Kill Pigeons Pooping On Saskatoon Bridge

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman
    WINNIPEG — The family of an Indigenous woman whose death prosecutors described as worse than any horror movie says there is finally justice now that her killer has been found guilty.    

    'There Was Justice:' Winnipeg Man Guilty Of Murdering Indigenous Woman

    U.S., European Diplomats Support Canada In Chinese Court In Death-Penalty Appeal

    The show of solidarity did not diminish Canadian worries over the fate of Robert Schellenberg of British Columbia.

    U.S., European Diplomats Support Canada In Chinese Court In Death-Penalty Appeal

    Refugee Changes Will Hurt Women Asylum Seekers, Women's Organizations Say

    Refugee Changes Will Hurt Women Asylum Seekers, Women's Organizations Say
    Last year, the United States said it wouldn't accept asylum claims based on fleeing domestic violence.

    Refugee Changes Will Hurt Women Asylum Seekers, Women's Organizations Say