Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Under Fire, Morneau Says He Plans To Put Assets In A Blind Trust

The Canadian Press, 19 Oct, 2017 12:27 PM
    OTTAWA — Embattled Finance Minister Bill Morneau says he plans to put his substantial personal assets in a blind trust, an effort to tamp down an escalating controversy over conflict of interest allegations that have threatened to undermine the federal Liberal government.
     
    Morneau also says he will eventually sell off all of his and his family's shares in Morneau Shepell, the human resources firm that bears his name.
     
    The former businessman has insisted he made sure to disclose all his assets to the federal ethics watchdog when he came into office, and he that he followed her recommendations very carefully to avoid any conflicts of interest.
     
    "I perhaps naively thought that following the rules and respecting the recommendations of the ethics commissioner ... would be what Canadians would expect," Morneau told a news conference.
     
    "In fact, what I have seen over the last week is I need to do more."
     
    Today's move — aimed at silencing Morneau's increasingly vocal critics — could also be considered a tacit acknowledgment that the rules themselves are in need of an update, something the ethics commissioner herself has suggested in the past.
     
    Commissioner Mary Dawson said this week she told Morneau a blind trust wouldn't be necessary, since his shares were indirectly held through private companies and were therefore not considered a "controlled asset" under the Conflict of Interest Act. 
     
    However, Dawson urged the previous Conservative government in 2013 to amend the law to require blind trusts for personal assets owned by public office holders, regardless of whether they were directly or indirectly owned — a change that was never made.
     
     
    Morneau, who had stepped down as Morneau Shepell's executive chairman shortly after the election, said at the time he expected to put his significant shares into a blind trust.
     
    A spokeswoman for Morneau Shepell also said that "just prior to leaving the company in October 2015, we understood from Mr. Morneau that his shares were to be placed in a blind trust."
     
    After he left, however, the company was no longer privy to his final decision, Cathren Ronberg wrote in an email.
     
    She added that, at the time of resignation, public filings showed he owned 2,254,109 shares in Morneau Shepell. Public records also show he held the vast majority of those shares through an Alberta numbered company. Morneau, however, said today that he owns only about 1 million shares.
     
    Those shares have a current value of around $21 per share.
     
    All week long, the Conservatives and New Democrats have accused the government of being in a conflict of interest created by a finance minister regulating an industry that includes a company in which he owned — and possibly still owns — significant shares.
     
    NDP MP Nathan Cullen has called on Dawson to investigate Morneau for spearheading pension reform legislation that could benefit Morneau Shepell and, through shares he may still hold, the minister himself.
     
    Morneau was asked Thursday how he planned to address the controversy, particularly since it had been widely assumed he had put his shares in a blind trust.
     
    "I am going to have more to say about this later today — so, stay tuned," he said.
     
    The allegations this week have largely drowned out Morneau's efforts to address another, earlier controversy over the government's tax-reform proposals.
     
    "Of course, there's been a distraction this week," Morneau said Thursday at a farm in the Ontario community of Erinsville, where he tried to highlight an announcement the government would no longer move forward with a tax change that has angered farmers.
     
    He said Ottawa will reconsider the proposal related to the conversion of income into capital gains after hearing concerns from farmers and fishers. The proposal raised fears about how it could hinder the intergenerational transfer of family business, like farms.
     
    It had been one of the three key components of the government's package of tax proposals.
     
    Morneau will return to the House of Commons on Thursday after spending the week making announcements to scale back some of the tax proposals, which have angered small business owners, doctors, farmers and even Liberal backbench MPs.
     
    During Morneau's absence Wednesday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was forced to come to his defence during a heated question period, repeatedly stating his minister followed the advice of the ethics commissioner.
     
    Despite being grilled on the matter, Trudeau refused to answer questions about when he found out Morneau's assets weren't in a blind trust.
     
    Earlier this week, the government also ditched another proposed measure that would have had a negative impact on the transfer of family businesses from one generation to the next.
     
    Morneau also announced this week that he will scale back a proposal to crack down on passive investment income, which was one of the most contentious elements of his plan.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Man Tried To Ship Live Snakes In Mail: U.S. Officials

    Canadian Man Tried To Ship Live Snakes In Mail: U.S. Officials
    BUFFALO, N.Y. — Federal prosecutors in New York say a Canadian man attempted to ship live snakes to China through the mail.

    Canadian Man Tried To Ship Live Snakes In Mail: U.S. Officials

    Deepak Chopra Announces He'll Leave Canada Post In The Spring Of 2018

    Deepak Chopra Announces He'll Leave Canada Post In The Spring Of 2018
    Canada Post says Deepak Chopra has advised the Crown corporation's board of directors that he intends leave his position on March 31, 2018.

    Deepak Chopra Announces He'll Leave Canada Post In The Spring Of 2018

    Justin Trudeau Condemns 'Cowardly' Burkina Faso Attack, Offers Condolences

    Justin Trudeau Condemns 'Cowardly' Burkina Faso Attack, Offers Condolences
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is offering condolences in the wake of a terrorist attack in Burkina Faso that killed 18 people, including two Canadians.

    Justin Trudeau Condemns 'Cowardly' Burkina Faso Attack, Offers Condolences

    Senior Armed Forces Officials Reviewing Probe Into 'Proud Boys' Incident

    Senior Armed Forces Officials Reviewing Probe Into 'Proud Boys' Incident
    HALIFAX — The Armed Forces says the investigation has concluded into the Canada Day incident in which a group of military members identifying themselves as "Proud Boys" disrupted an Indigenous ceremony in Halifax.

    Senior Armed Forces Officials Reviewing Probe Into 'Proud Boys' Incident

    Indian-Origin Irish PM Leo Varadkar To March With Justin Trudeau In Montreal's Pride Parade Sunday

    Indian-Origin Irish PM Leo Varadkar To March With Justin Trudeau In Montreal's Pride Parade Sunday
    OTTAWA — Leo Varadkar, Ireland's taoiseach, or prime minister, will join Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at Montreal's Pride parade during a three-day visit that gets underway Saturday.

    Indian-Origin Irish PM Leo Varadkar To March With Justin Trudeau In Montreal's Pride Parade Sunday

    Drive-by Shooting In Abbotsford, Car Set On Fire, Police Investigate

    Drive-by Shooting In Abbotsford, Car Set On Fire, Police Investigate
    On Monday, August 14, 2017, at 7:50 pm, the Abbotsford Police Department received a call of a reported shooting. The caller indicated that he was the driver of a black Audi that was southbound on Bradner Road. 

    Drive-by Shooting In Abbotsford, Car Set On Fire, Police Investigate