Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ethics watchdog bites ex-ambassador to U.S.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2020 08:51 PM
  • Ethics watchdog bites ex-ambassador to U.S.

Canada’s former ambassador to the United States has been cited by the federal ethics watchdog for improper lobbying after he left office, and barred from contact with senior ministers and political officials.

David MacNaughton was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s point man in Washington for 3 1/2 years before he left one year ago.

After leaving office, he arranged multiple meetings over March, April and May of this year between senior government officials, ministers and Palantir Technologies Canada.

Among those in the meetings were Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland, Industry Minister Navdeep Bains and chief of defence staff Gen. Jonathan Vance.

In all, nine ministers, aides and top public servants were involved.

Ethics commissioner Mario Dion says none of those officials can have official dealings with MacNaughton for a period of one year as a result of improper lobbying.

Silicon Valley billionaire Peter Thiel founded the data-analytics company in 2003, where MacNaughton now works. The company is set to go public next week.

Palantir amasses vast quantities of data and hunts for patterns in it, selling access to companies and governments, including security agencies.

The meetings MacNaughton arranged came as governments were looking for ways to track COVID-19 cases.

Dion said in a ruling that MacNaughton opened doors for the company to key Liberal government players as part of an offer for pro bono help in the government’s pandemic response.

In all, there were 17 meetings or communications cited by Dion as troubling.

Dion says none of the meetings resulted in a contract for Palantir. The company did land a contract with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to help the agency better stay on top on the spread of the novel coronavirus and the disease it causes.

Federal ethics rules prohibit former holders of public offices from using their previous posts to improperly open government doors, and Dion writes that MacNaughton realizes now his actions ran afoul of the law.

"Mr. MacNaughton has acknowledged, with the benefit of hindsight, that these communications and meetings, to the extent they could have furthered the interests of Palantir, were contrary" to the ethics law, Dion writes.

NDP ethics critic Charlie Angus said the ruling was a damning indictment of how the Trudeau government operates, questioning how the ministers and officials didn't see a conflict of interest.

"It's their disregard for the rule of law that gets this government in trouble time and time again," Angus said.

"With a company like this, I don't think it's acceptable that they can be so flippant and so willing to disregard the rule of law in Canada."

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Police Crack Down On Property Crime, Arrest 26 Suspects In Three Months

An ongoing Vancouver Police project targeting property crime in downtown Vancouver has resulted in 150 criminal charges recommended to Crown counsel over three months.

Vancouver Police Crack Down On Property Crime, Arrest 26 Suspects In Three Months

Day Of Weird News | Granpa Fights Off Robber With Killer Moves | Human Brain Mailed In Jar To USA

Human Brain Mailed From Toronto In Canada Post Shipment To Wisconsin Seized At U.S. Border

Day Of Weird News | Granpa Fights Off Robber With Killer Moves | Human Brain Mailed In Jar To USA

Canadians From Coronavirus-Stricken Cruise Ship In Japan To Fly Home Thursday: Champagne

Canadians who have spent weeks on a coronavirus-stricken cruise ship in Japan will board a government-chartered plane to take them home Thursday evening, the foreign affairs minister says.

Canadians From Coronavirus-Stricken Cruise Ship In Japan To Fly Home Thursday: Champagne

Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies

Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies
TORONTO - An Ontario court has extended an order suspending legal proceedings against three major tobacco companies as they try to negotiate a settlement with their creditors.    

Judge Extends Order Suspending Legal Proceedings Against Three Tobacco Companies

CP Rail Conductor Fired For Social Media Posts Awarded Money, But Not Reinstatement

CALGARY - An arbitrator says a former Canadian Pacific train conductor who was fired over social media posts is entitled to monetary compensation, but not to getting her job back at the railroad.

CP Rail Conductor Fired For Social Media Posts Awarded Money, But Not Reinstatement

Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades

Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair says the RCMP in British Columbia has offered to move its officers to a town away from the area where traditional leaders of the Wet'suwet'en First Nation have been opposing a pipeline project on their territory.

Blair Says RCMP Have Met Wet'suwet'en Conditions, Calls For End To Blockades