Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Tory Leader Andrew Scheer Insists Committee Get Briefed On India Trip Before He Does

The Canadian Press, 06 Apr, 2018 05:01 PM
    OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer says he won't accept a private, classified briefing about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's India trip until after an unclassified version of the briefing is presented at committee.
     
     
    In a letter to Privy Council clerk Michael Wernick, Scheer says his office will follow up to find a date for the classified briefing with national security adviser Daniel Jean only after Jean appears at the public safety committee.
     
     
    Scheer and the Conservatives are not yet convinced Liberal MPs won't again block Jean from repeating at committee the information he gave journalists in February about how Jaspal Atwal — convicted in 1986 of trying to kill an Indian cabinet minister — came to be invited to two separate receptions during Trudeau's state visit to India.
     
     
    The government offered Scheer a classified briefing with Jean about the matter, but the Conservatives said no, arguing Jean should be able to tell MPs the same thing he told the media.
     
     
     
     
    They argued the only reason the government wouldn't let Jean do that would be if he had provided classified information in those media briefings, something the government steadfastly denies.
     
     
    The Privy Council Office relented earlier this week, offering both a confidential briefing to Scheer and for Jean to appear at committee — but Scheer says the latter has to happen before he'll accept the former.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta Shrugs Off B.C. Legal Challenge On Wine Ban, Says Much More At Stake

    Alberta Shrugs Off B.C. Legal Challenge On Wine Ban, Says Much More At Stake
    Alberta's economic development minister is shrugging off a legal challenge filed by British Columbia over Alberta's ban on wine from that province.

    Alberta Shrugs Off B.C. Legal Challenge On Wine Ban, Says Much More At Stake

    Sikh Kirpan Ban In Quebec Legislature Upheld By Top Provincial Court

    Superior Court Justice Pierre Journet affirmed the authority of the legislature to "exclude kirpans from its precincts as an assertion of parliamentary privilege over the exclusion of strangers."

    Sikh Kirpan Ban In Quebec Legislature Upheld By Top Provincial Court

    Justin Trudeau Announces Two-way Investment Deal With India Worth $1 Billion

    Justin Trudeau Announces Two-way Investment Deal With India Worth $1 Billion
    MUMBAI, India — Some of India's biggest companies say they will invest more than $250 million in Canada in the coming years in everything from pulp mills to pharmaceuticals and the IT sector.

    Justin Trudeau Announces Two-way Investment Deal With India Worth $1 Billion

    WATCH: Justin Trudeau Is For One United India, Looking Forward To Meet Punjab CM

    WATCH: Justin Trudeau Is For One United India, Looking Forward To Meet Punjab CM
    The Canadian prime minister’s schedule includes just half-a-day of official engagements in New Delhi.

    WATCH: Justin Trudeau Is For One United India, Looking Forward To Meet Punjab CM

    Vacationing Calgary Man Dies In Mexico Following Sudden Illness

    Vacationing Calgary Man Dies In Mexico Following Sudden Illness
    Troy Black was with his wife, Lindsay, in Puerto Vallarta when he began vomiting blood on Thursday. Doctors then found a tear in his esophagus, said his friend Jonathan Denis, a lawyer and Alberta's former justice minister.

    Vacationing Calgary Man Dies In Mexico Following Sudden Illness

    Liberals Looking At Creating Use-It-Or-Lose-It Leave For Fathers, Justin Trudeau Says

    Liberals Looking At Creating Use-It-Or-Lose-It Leave For Fathers, Justin Trudeau Says
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government is looking at creating a use-it-or-lose-it funded leave for new dads.

    Liberals Looking At Creating Use-It-Or-Lose-It Leave For Fathers, Justin Trudeau Says