Tuesday, July 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Tories blast Liberals for axing defence committee

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2021 05:17 PM
  • Tories blast Liberals for axing defence committee

Opposition parties are up in arms after a parliamentary committee meeting in which members were expected to debate calling Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's chief of staff to testify was cancelled without notice.

Members of the Commons defence committee had been preparing to continue debating this morning whether to call Katie Telford to answer questions on the government's handling of a sexual misconduct allegation against retired general Jonathan Vance, which he denies.

The debate first started on Friday, before Liberal committee members talked out the clock and the meeting was suspended without a resolution.

Conservative defence critic James Bezan accused Liberal MP and committee chair Karen McCrimmon of singlehandedly cancelling the meeting to protect Telford and the government as part of a cover-up.

McCrimmon did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Conservative Leader Erin O’Toole, meanwhile, says his party will ask the House of Commons to support a motion calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to fire Telford over the Vance affair, though NDP defence critic Randall Garrison says his party will not support it.

Garrison says responsibility for how the allegation against Vance was handled ultimately lies with the prime minister and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

MORE National ARTICLES

Ontario Confirms Seventh Coronavirus Case; Man Had Travelled To Iran

TORONTO - Ontario now has seven confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, with the three most recent patients all having recently travelled to Iran.    

Ontario Confirms Seventh Coronavirus Case; Man Had Travelled To Iran

Manitoba Pushes Ahead With Carbon Tax Court Challenge; Still Hoping For Deal

WINNIPEG - The Manitoba government is pushing ahead with a court challenge of the federal carbon tax although Premier Brian Pallister says he'd still like to see a deal with Ottawa.    

Manitoba Pushes Ahead With Carbon Tax Court Challenge; Still Hoping For Deal

Lawsuit Over African Mine Can Be Heard In British Columbia: Supreme Court

Lawsuit Over African Mine Can Be Heard In British Columbia: Supreme Court
OTTAWA - A human-rights lawsuit against a Canadian mining company can be heard in British Columbia, even though it involves events in Africa, the Supreme Court of Canada says.

Lawsuit Over African Mine Can Be Heard In British Columbia: Supreme Court

Federal Government Runs $11-Billion Deficit For April-To-December Period

OTTAWA - The federal government ran a deficit of $11.0 billion over the first nine months of its 2019-20 fiscal year.    

Federal Government Runs $11-Billion Deficit For April-To-December Period

Privacy Watchdog Probes RCMP's Use Of Facial-Recognition Software

OTTAWA - The federal privacy commissioner is investigating the RCMP's use of cutting-edge facial-recognition software.    

Privacy Watchdog Probes RCMP's Use Of Facial-Recognition Software

Quebec Reports First Presumptive Case Of Coronavirus, Woman From Montreal Area

MONTREAL - Quebec public health officials are reporting the province's first presumptive case of the new coronavirus.    

Quebec Reports First Presumptive Case Of Coronavirus, Woman From Montreal Area