Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Procurement minister warns of fallout from probe

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Oct, 2020 06:07 PM
  • Procurement minister warns of fallout from probe

Canada's procurement minister says federal contracts for personal protective equipment, vaccines and rapid test kits are in jeopardy due to a proposed parliamentary probe of the Trudeau government's handling of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The probe could trigger the release of commercially sensitive information, scaring off manufacturers and drug companies that would otherwise do business with Ottawa and ultimately placing Canadians' health at risk, Anita Anand said Monday.

"It's not just a question of violating existing contacts that, for example, may have confidentiality clauses in them; it’s also a question of undermining current negotiations," she said at a news conference.

"This is not the time to threaten and weaken our relationships with our suppliers, on whom Canadians’ health and safety depends."

Opposition parties are poised to approve the probe this afternoon despite growing objections from industry and experts.

A Conservative motion would order the government to turn over to the Commons health committee all records on a raft of issues related to the government's response to the pandemic.

Conservative health critic Michelle Rempel Garner said she was "disappointed" with the government's remarks Monday, calling them "bombastic," "hyperbolic" and "complete garbage."

The sweeping motion, which she penned, addresses issues such as national security, personal privacy and commercial sensitivities tied to vaccines, Rempel Garner said.

She accused the Liberals of trying to go trigger an election, though the government has pledged not to treat the motion as a confidence matter — unlike a similar Conservative motion defeated last week that would have created a committee to look into the WE Charity controversy..

"I don't even know what to say, and that takes a lot," she said.

Pfizer Canada is the latest company to express concerns about probe, asking how the pharmaceutical giant's commercial secrets will be protected.

In a letter to a senior Health Canada official obtained by The Canadian Press, Pfizer Canada president Cole Pinnow says his company has questions about a requirement in the motion that the government produce documents related to the production and purchase of a vaccine for COVID-19.

He goes on to say that while the company is seeking legal advice, it wants to hear from Health Canada what process will be used to vet sensitive information before it is released to the committee.

Anand warned that the House of Commons law clerk "wouldn’t have the necessary expertise in procurement" to properly redact records that would surface through the probe. "And yet the law clerk will be the one making all decisions regarding redaction," she said in French.

Rempel Garner responded that the government was "proactively calling pharmaceutical companies and fearmongering" over the weekend.

The role of the law clerk, who she said the Liberals were "attacking," is precisely to ensure that sensitive information is not released unduly, Rempel Garner said.

The Conservative motion is expected to pass with support from the federal New Democrats and Bloc Québécois, who have insisted there is sufficient protection for industry while accusing the Liberals of stoking fears.

Last week, the NDP and Greens joined the Liberals in opposing the Conservative move to create an anticorruption committee that would have had a broad mandate to examine the WE affair, and almost any other pandemic-related spending, by demanding documents and summoning senior civil servants to testify.

On Monday, New Democrats and Liberals appeared to agree on a different path for the government to turn over documents about the WE controversy. That has stirred up months of turbulence in the House over a now-cancelled agreement for WE Charity to manage a summer volunteering program for students, with a potential budget of up to $912 million.

The two parties voted in favour of an amendment from NDP ethics critic Charlie Angus that narrows a request for Trudeau family speaking records to only those pertaining to the prime minister and his wife.

The motion initially aimed to obtain records from the Speakers' Spotlight agency relating to all appearances for Justin Trudeau, his wife Sophie, mother Margaret and brother Alexandre as far back as 2008.

MORE National ARTICLES

No-stopping zone in place on B.C. section of Trans-Canada to protect bears

No-stopping zone in place on B.C. section of Trans-Canada to protect bears
Parks Canada has put in a 10-kilometre, no-stopping zone to protect several bears — including a rare white grizzly — that are feeding along the Trans-Canada Highway.

No-stopping zone in place on B.C. section of Trans-Canada to protect bears

Check Out "Volvo XC90" - One of the SAFEST Cars Money Can BUY

Check Out
Darpan visits JIM PATTISON VOLVO Showroom in Surrey to check out the latest offerings from VOLVO! VOLVO Surrey has some GREAT DEALS going on so believe it or not you can still invest in a great luxury vehicle that is affordable and is one of the safest vehicles on the market.

Check Out "Volvo XC90" - One of the SAFEST Cars Money Can BUY

A big fire destroys an apartment building in South Vancouver

A big fire destroys an apartment building in South Vancouver
A massive blaze engulfed an apartment buidling in South Vancouver Thursday evening. Firefighters were at intersection of West 62nd Avenue and Columbia Street. The fire gutted the four-storey apartment building under construction and turned it into ash.

A big fire destroys an apartment building in South Vancouver

High Risk Sex Offender to reside in Vancouver

High Risk Sex Offender to reside in Vancouver
Vancouver Police are warning the public that Frank William Skani will be residing in Vancouver and poses a significant risk to women in the community. The Correctional Service of Canada has assessed Skani as high risk for sexual recidivism.

High Risk Sex Offender to reside in Vancouver

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane
Military investigators have revealed the sequence of events that led the Royal Canadian Air Force plane normally used by the prime minister to run into a tow tractor and hangar wall and suffer severe damage.

Bad chocks, brake training blamed for crash to prime minister's plane

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China
The Senate's ethics committee is recommending that a Conservative senator be censured for breaching the upper house’s ethics code when he accepted an all-expenses paid trip to China in 2017.

Senate ethics committee urges censure of Tory senator over trip to China