Scientists Hid China Contacts

Two Chinese-Canadian scientists fired by the Public Health Agency kept secret contacts with Beijing and maintained a Chinese bank account, documents show. Cabinet yesterday disclosed a 614-page report confirming the husband and wife given top clearance at the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg were security risks: ‘Asked what she would so if approached by the Chinese government, Ms. Qiu responded, ‘Well, it depends.’

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Wasn’t My Fault, Says Anand

Treasury Board President Anita Anand yesterday said ArriveCan contracts “did not cross my desk” when she was Minister of Public Works responsible for federal contracting. Anand’s remarks came as the Commons outvoted Liberal MPs 170 to 149 for full disclosure of ArriveCan costs: “Did you know about any of this?”

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Claim Protesters Were Violent

The Freedom Convoy posed a “risk of serious violence” that justified emergency measures, says Attorney General Arif Virani. His remarks came five weeks after a federal judge ruled use of the Emergencies Act against peaceful demonstrators was unjustified and unlawful: “There was a risk of serious violence.”

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RCMP Never Made The Call

The RCMP yesterday acknowledged it never interviewed Prime Minister Justin Trudeau or had access to secret cabinet records before dismissing obstruction charges in the SNC-Lavalin Group scandal. The admission came under questioning at the Commons ethics committee: “We still don’t know to this day all the information that is out there.”

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Say Subsidies Pay For Failure

The ongoing federal bailout of money-losing news corporations perpetuates media failure, journalists yesterday told Commons heritage committee. Soliciting and pocketing subsidies has only damaged newsrooms’ credibility, witnesses said: “Lobbying for government money and accepting it does little to enhance confidence.”

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Labour Bill Inching Forward

The Commons yesterday by a unanimous 318-0 vote gave Second Reading to a bill banning replacement workers in the federally regulated private sector. One MP noted the bill if passed has little chance of coming into force before the next election: “Tabling it and passing it are two different things.”

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Small Place Not For Everyone

Cabinet does not want to subsidize “smaller apartments that are maybe not suitable for everybody,” a Department of Finance executive said yesterday. A GST break for builders subsidizes all new rental housing regardless of price: ‘Any limit like $500,000 would favour smaller apartments that are maybe not suitable for everybody.’

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Two Colleges “Unacceptable”

Immigration Minister Marc Miller yesterday named two colleges he accused of “unacceptable” recruitment of foreign students. Miller complained of 982,880 foreigners granted federal study permits nationwide too many were jumping immigration queues by claiming asylum: “You have the Conestoga’s, the Seneca’s of the world.”

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Testify Or Jail On ArriveCan

Conservative MP Kelly McCauley (Edmonton West) yesterday without fanfare obtained a rare House order compelling two reluctant ArriveCan witnesses to testify or be taken into custody. The two partners in GC Strategies Inc. have 21 days to surrender: “The Sergeant-at-Arms shall take Kristian Firth, Darren Anthony or both of them into his custody.”

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More Scrutiny For App Firm

MPs yesterday ordered yet more records delving into business practices of an ArriveCan contractor involved in an earlier app, the failed Covid Alert program. GC Strategies Inc. of Woodlawn, Ont. was paid more than a million for “professional services” under a 2020 contract only recently disclosed: “How can people who are merely consultants get in on these contracts?”

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Try Again On Censorship Act

Attorney General Arif Virani yesterday reintroduced a cabinet bill to curb “harmful content” on social media. The bill stopped short of unprecedented censorship powers detailed in a failed 2021 bill that lapsed in the last Parliament: “I have listened.”

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Catching Them Six At A Time

Customs officers may only seize six stolen cars at a time at the Port of Montréal due to lack of waterfront parking, the president of the Customs and Immigration Union yesterday told MPs. Mark Weber also testified the Port had to borrow a large X-ray scanner from Windsor, Ont. after its single machine went out of service: “Once we find six stolen vehicles we sometimes have to wait days for somebody to come and take the vehicles away before we can inspect anymore.”

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