Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh Calls For Public Inquiry Over SNC-Lavalin Questions

The Canadian Press, 19 Feb, 2019 02:47 AM

    BURNABY, B.C. — Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says a public inquiry is necessary in the scandal involving engineering giant SNC-Lavalin and Canada's former justice minister.

     

    Singh says serious questions need to be answered about the scandal that cuts to the heart of Canada's democracy.

     

    Vancouver member of Parliament Jody Wilson-Raybould resigned from cabinet last week, days after a report that says she was pressured to help SNC-Lavalin avoid criminal prosecution when she was justice minister.

     

    She was moved to veterans affairs in a cabinet shuffle last month before she resigned, saying she was getting legal advice on what she was permitted to say about the claims.

     
     
     
     

    Singh, who's campaigning in Burnaby, B.C., for a byelection next Monday, says Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberal government appears to be acting on behalf of its "friends" in this situation.

     

    He says after Liberal justice committee members attempted last week to obstruct any attempt to get to the bottom of the allegations, while the prime minister repeatedly changed his story, it's become clear that a public inquiry is needed.

     

    The New Democrats will is also asking Trudeau to allow Wilson-Raybould to be able to speak about the issue.

     

    The party will ask for a vote on both measures later this week, he says.

     

    "These are things that Canadians demand," Singh says.

     

    The call comes as Gerald Butts, Trudeau's principal secretary and longtime friend, resigned.

     

    In a statement, Butts denies the accusation that he or anyone else in the office improperly pressured Wilson-Raybould to help SNC-Lavalin avoid a criminal case on corruption and bribery charges related to government contracts in Libya.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Frigid Winnipeg: Does 1 Of The Planet'S Coldest Big Cities Need Warming Centre?

    Frigid Winnipeg: Does 1 Of The Planet'S Coldest Big Cities Need Warming Centre?
    WINNIPEG — In a city where winter can be almost guaranteed to bring temperatures below -30 C, saving homeless people and other vulnerable persons from severe frostbite or even death is a complex project.    

    Frigid Winnipeg: Does 1 Of The Planet'S Coldest Big Cities Need Warming Centre?

    RCMP Divers On Frozen Saskatchewan Lake Find Remains From Decades-Old Crash

    "I was happy that I could talk to them and impress upon them how important it was for our family to just see this through. They understood completely."

    RCMP Divers On Frozen Saskatchewan Lake Find Remains From Decades-Old Crash

    Arrests Made In Death Of SFU Professor Ramazan Gencay In Colombia

    Arrests have been made in the case of a British Columbia university professor found dead in Colombia.

    Arrests Made In Death Of SFU Professor Ramazan Gencay In Colombia

    Report Finds 'Sexual Misconduct' By Leader Of Halifax-Based Buddhist Church

    Two claims of sexual misconduct against the Halifax-based spiritual leader of the Shambhala International Buddhist organization have been found to be credible, a long-awaited independent probe has found.

    Report Finds 'Sexual Misconduct' By Leader Of Halifax-Based Buddhist Church

    RCMP Suspend Search For Missing B.C. Rancher Ben Tyner After Nearly A Week

    RCMP Suspend Search For Missing B.C. Rancher Ben Tyner After Nearly A Week
    MERRITT, B.C. — Police have suspended the search for a missing rancher in the wilderness north of Merritt, B.C., after six days of exhaustive effort turned up nothing.

    RCMP Suspend Search For Missing B.C. Rancher Ben Tyner After Nearly A Week

    Ottawa Says Ontario's Call To Drop Retaliatory Tariffs Would Mean 'Surrender'

    Ottawa Says Ontario's Call To Drop Retaliatory Tariffs Would Mean 'Surrender'
    TORONTO — Ottawa is dismissing a call from Ontario's economic development minister to drop retaliatory tariffs against the United States, saying doing so would mean "unilateral surrender" to the Americans.    

    Ottawa Says Ontario's Call To Drop Retaliatory Tariffs Would Mean 'Surrender'