Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Nov, 2020 11:16 PM
  • Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair

The House of Commons ethics committee continues to be stuck on a motion to examine government spending during the COVID-19 pandemic and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s relationship with WE Charity.

Liberal MPs occupied most of two hours with ruminations on the role of Parliament, the proper business of the ethics committee, and the value of the organizations the other parties' MPs want to examine.

In the end, the committee adjourned without taking a vote, and its chair David Sweet said he wasn't sure when it could meet again.

The motion is a third attempt at examining conflicts of interest in the government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, after two tries to probe Trudeau’s relationship with WE Charity each failed by one vote.

The motion before the committee was proposed Monday by NDP MP Charlie Angus before it was amended twice to expand its scope beyond WE.

Liberal MP Brenda Shanahan spoke for about 30 minutes at the beginning of the committee's meeting, saying the proposed probe is now too broad.

"This is a fishing expedition. They're going on a wild-goose chase," she said.

The committee started Monday debating the motion to study possible conflicts of interest and lobbying violations in relation to pandemic spending.

The core idea is to examine whether people with Liberal connections have received undue advantages in getting government contracts or changes in government policy during hurried responses to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Bloc Québécois MP Marie-Hélène Gaudreau proposed an amendment to add a look at all contracts for speeches by Trudeau and his wife since Trudeau was elected to Parliament, which Angus backed.

At issue there is the relationship between the Trudeaus and WE Charity, the group the government picked to run a program to pay stipends to students for volunteering for pandemic-related causes last summer.

The deal collapsed days after the prime minister announced it, amid questions about whether the WE organization was qualified for the work and how much members of Trudeau's family have been paid for appearances at WE events over the years.

The committee would invite representatives of the Trudeaus' speaking agency to testify about all files related to speeches organized, since Oct. 14, 2008, for Trudeau and his wife, and would demand copies of all the relevant paperwork.

Shanahan said Tuesday the amended version is so wide and would require the committee to investigate the "private life" of Trudeau's family, adding that Angus said that Parliament is not the place to conduct such investigations

Angus interrupted, saying she was misrepresenting him.

"We decided not to continue the investigation to the Trudeau family as a sign of goodwill to try and get the Liberals to actually stop filibustering," he said.

"She has found every possible means to obstruct and to filibuster and to deny us getting to our work."

Liberal MP Francesco Sorbara then spoke for almost an hour, reading reports and documents related to companies the government contracted during the pandemic.

A first motion aiming to acquire WE Charity speaking contracts involving Trudeau and his wife Sophie Grégoire Trudeau failed last week when Bloc Québécois MP Julie Vignola joined Liberals in voting against it — by accident, the Bloc said then.

“We were victims of a communications problem,” Gaudreau said.

She proposed a second motion Monday, to study Trudeau’s and his wife's speaking contracts.

That failed on a 4-5 vote, with Angus abstaining, before Gaudreau got a similar idea tacked onto Angus's motion.

MORE National ARTICLES

N.S. First Nation launches lobster fleet

N.S. First Nation launches lobster fleet
A Canadian Coast Guard vessel was spotted offshore, but a federal spokeswoman later said there were no reports of violence on the water.

N.S. First Nation launches lobster fleet

WATCH: Early Election For BC a possibility

WATCH: Early Election For BC a possibility
WATCH: It’s a trick or a treat for the BC NDP as the possibility of an early provincial election looms for British Columbians.

WATCH: Early Election For BC a possibility

Virtual health care here to stay

Virtual health care here to stay
Patient advocates describe the shift as a double-edged sword, saying the increased health-care access that remote care can provide is often countered by drawbacks that place seniors, disabled Canadians and other marginalized communities at greater risk of harm.

Virtual health care here to stay

Mourners grieve Traynor family killed in shooting

Mourners grieve Traynor family killed in shooting
Fifty-year-old Chris Traynor and the couple's children, 20-year-old Bradley Traynor, 15-year-old Adelaide Traynor and 11-year-old Joseph Traynor were killed in their home earlier this month.

Mourners grieve Traynor family killed in shooting

Surrey's Anti Gang Task Force traffic stop leads to seizure of vehicle and cash worth over $50K

Surrey's Anti Gang Task Force traffic stop leads to seizure of vehicle and cash worth over $50K
As the investigation advanced, police located numerous bundles of bulk cash, estimated to exceed $50,000, and packages of suspected steroids, inside the vehicle.

Surrey's Anti Gang Task Force traffic stop leads to seizure of vehicle and cash worth over $50K

Canada needs rapid tests now: O'Toole

Canada needs rapid tests now: O'Toole
O'Toole and his family were tested Thursday for COVID-19 through a program for MPs, after waiting for several hours to be tested in Ottawa Wednesday and having to give up.

Canada needs rapid tests now: O'Toole