Friday, June 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

CEO, board of Trudeau Foundation resign

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 11 Apr, 2023 12:59 PM
  • CEO, board of Trudeau Foundation resign

OTTAWA - The CEO and most members of the board of directors for the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation said Tuesday they are stepping down because of the political climate surrounding their work in recent months.

In a statement posted on its website, the foundation said the politicization of a donation it received seven years ago has put a great deal of pressure on its management, volunteer board of directors and staff.

The Globe and Mail newspaper reported in late February that Chinese billionaire Zhang Bin and another Chinese businessman, Niu Gensheng, donated $200,000 to the foundation in 2016. Citing an unnamed national security source, the newspaper reported that Zhang was instructed by Beijing to donate $1 million in honour of the elder Trudeau in 2014.

A press release from the China Cultural Industry Association at the time of the donation said the money was given to honour Pierre Trudeau, who established diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China in 1970.

The foundation, which describes itself as independent and non-partisan, said last month that it was returning the money because of a potential connection between the donation and the Chinese government.

"We cannot keep any donation that may have been sponsored by a foreign government and would not knowingly do so," said the foundation's president and CEO, Pascale Fournier, at the time when the donation was returned.

The foundation's statement on Tuesday said three directors will stay with the organization on an interim basis to ensure it can continue to meet its obligations.

"The circumstances created by the politicization of the foundation have made it impossible to continue with the status quo, and the volunteer board of directors has resigned, as has the president and CEO," the statement said.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said he stepped back from the Trudeau Foundation years ago. The charity has previously said his formal involvement ended in 2014, about a year after he was elected Liberal leader.

"Those people who are trying to get short-term political gain by increasing polarization and partisanship in this country by launching completely unfounded, and ungrounded attacks against charities or foundations must not succeed," Trudeau told reporters Tuesday in Toronto when asked about the resignations.

"I have no doubt that the Trudeau Foundation, like foundations and charities that Conservative politicians have attacked in the past, will continue to do the excellent work that it will do."

The Liberal government has been under increasing pressure to respond to reports that China has attempted to interfere in Canadian affairs after a series of stories published by the Globe and Mail and Global News.

Members of a parliamentary committee are pressing for information about when Trudeau was briefed about Beijing's attempted interference in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections.

Opposition MPs have sent a letter to the clerk of the Privy Council requesting the information, saying they want those details before the prime minister's chief of staff, Katie Telford, testifies on Friday.

Meanwhile, the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians and the National Security and Intelligence Review Agency are investigating claims of Chinese meddling in recent elections.

Trudeau has also appointed David Johnston as a special rapporteur to investigate foreign interference.

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre accused Trudeau and Johnston of being too close, and pointed out that the former governor general was a member of the Trudeau Foundation.

Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet again Tuesday called on Trudeau to revoke Johnston's mandate and launch a public inquiry.

"Leave it to Parliament next week to choose one or more commissioners who will chair the commission of inquiry into Chinese interference in the Canadian democratic process," he said in a statement in French.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh echoed the calls for a public inquiry when speaking to reporters Tuesday.

"The Liberals and Conservatives are playing a political game to win points rather than really targeting how important this is and finding solutions," he said in French.

MORE National ARTICLES

The ArriveCan conundrum: Does the app have a use?

The ArriveCan conundrum: Does the app have a use?
The glitch-prone app touted as an efficient border tool early in the pandemic has become a punching bag for critics who question its utility ⁠ — but ArriveCan may be here to stay. The government insists it's a useful tool. Critics say it has outlived its use, if it ever had one.

The ArriveCan conundrum: Does the app have a use?

Wolf escape at B.C. zoo suspected as 'malicious'

Wolf escape at B.C. zoo suspected as 'malicious'
Earlier, British Columbia's Environment Ministry had said that only one wolf was still missing at the zoo, located about 55 kilometres east of Vancouver in the community of Aldergrove. It did not say how many had escaped at the facility, which says it has nine adult grey wolves and six cubs.  

Wolf escape at B.C. zoo suspected as 'malicious'

String of overnight fires being investigated by Surrey RCMP, fires started deliberately

String of overnight fires being investigated by Surrey RCMP, fires started deliberately
Based on the initial information it appears that the fires were deliberately started.  Due to the short time frame and close proximity of the fires police believe that they are likely related.

String of overnight fires being investigated by Surrey RCMP, fires started deliberately

10,000 drug deaths since B.C. emergency: coroner

10,000 drug deaths since B.C. emergency: coroner
New data from the coroner's service says at least 1,095 residents are believed to have died from January to June this year, at an average of six deaths per day. The report found more than three-quarters of the those who died this year have been male, and most were between the ages of 30 and 59.

10,000 drug deaths since B.C. emergency: coroner

Border officers cite discrimination by colleagues

Border officers cite discrimination by colleagues
The figures are drawn from a survey conducted as part of an internal Canada Border Services Agency evaluation that looked at how the agency processed travellers, using a lens of gender, race, ethnicity, religion, age, and mental or physical disability, and the interaction between these factors.

Border officers cite discrimination by colleagues

Inflation slows to 7.6% in July as gas prices fall

Inflation slows to 7.6% in July as gas prices fall
The inflation rate hit a nearly 40-year-high of 8.1 per cent in June, but economists were widely expecting inflation to have since slowed. In its latest consumer price index report, Statistics Canada said the July saw the smallest monthly gains since December 2021.

Inflation slows to 7.6% in July as gas prices fall