Caught Skirting Access Law

Federal Comptroller General Roch Huppé ordered managers to “be careful what you write down” to avoid creating records subject to Access To Information. The remarks were made in a teleconference with chief financial officers: "They have to be careful."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

“Slavery Was Here”: Minister

Canadians should educate themselves on slavery even if it was outlawed here decades before Confederation, Equality Minister Marci Ien yesterday told reporters. “It doesn’t matter who was in charge,” said Ien.

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Bill Called Covid ‘Whitewash’

The Commons yesterday by a vote of 176 to 142 gave Second Reading to a bill critics called a bid to whitewash federal mismanagement of the pandemic. The private bill sponsored by Liberal MP Nathaniel Erskine-Smith (Beaches-East York, Ont.) proposed that cabinet appoint a committee to review itself: "Canadians will never get the answers they deserve."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Keep Up Fight For Fee Caps

Small business yesterday appealed for a cap on billions' worth of credit card fees charged retailers. The Department of Finance for more than a decade has permitted Visa and MasterCard to set their own rates under a voluntary Code Of Conduct: "Who do we work for?”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

It’s Broken Says Budget Office

The federal government is “broken” and bungles basic tasks with little cabinet scrutiny, Budget Officer Yves Giroux said yesterday. “There needs to be a crack of the whip, big time,” he said: "Hold the government to account. I cannot do this just by myself."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Gov’t Fails In-House Polling

Cabinet is on the wrong track and appears overwhelmed by events, Canadians tell pollsters in Privy Council in-house research. Participants in federal focus groups also gave cabinet a failing grade in tackling inflation: "Very few participants believed the Government of Canada was currently on the right track."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Did Not Know Of 49 Firings

Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough yesterday disclosed she was never told dozens of department employees were under investigation for fraud. Qualtrough said she only learned after the fact that 49 were fired for cheating the Canada Emergency Response Benefit program: "No one brought to your attention specifically that there were employees being investigated within your department?"

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Freeland Friends Get Audited

The Commons yesterday by a unanimous 320 to 0 vote ordered a special audit of federal contracts to McKinsey & Company, a global consulting firm formerly led by a friend of Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland. Liberal MPs endorsed the Conservative motion amid complaints the Opposition was looking for evidence of corruption: "We have a right to know what is going on."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Says China Cost MP His Seat

Communist Party agents cost a Conservative MP his seat in Parliament, the House affairs committee was told yesterday. MP Kenny Chiu (Steveston-Richmond East, B.C.) was targeted by a “massive campaign of disinformation,” testified an investigator who looked at the case: "If had not been for that disinformation Mr. Chiu would still be in Parliament."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Spy Hunt Must Be “Sensitive”

Any federal attempt to unmask Chinese foreign agents must be “culturally sensitive,” Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino said last night. Legislators have sought passage of a Foreign Agents Registration Act similar to a law enacted by the United States in 1938: "It would help to bring people out of the shadows."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Claim They Saved 800K Lives

The Public Health Agency yesterday claimed it saved 800,000 lives in Canada under its vaccination program. The claim was made as MPs questioned auditors’ findings that the Agency wasted $1 billion of the $5 billion it spent on Covid shots: "Shame on you."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Committee Erased Testimony

Several minutes of a public hearing have been censored by a Commons committee. MPs erased a 26-minute portion of video recordings in which a witness divulged details of a sex crime: "This testimony has been deleted."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Marijuana Versus Road Safety

There has been a “significant increase in the prevalence of drug use” by drivers since Parliament legalized marijuana, says a Department of Public Safety report. Findings were drawn from self-reporting by cannabis users and blood testing of those hospitalized with traffic injuries: "There are some concerning indicators."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Election Year Ads Hit $141M

Cabinet boosted election-year government advertising to $140.8 million, the highest figure disclosed to date. Only half the spending was related to pandemic safety measures: "This is very difficult to justify."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Secret Contract Talks Are OK

The Lobbying Act permits corporations to secretly negotiate sole-sourced federal contracts without disclosing the fact, the Commons ethics committee has learned. MPs questioned the practice in cases like Baylis Medical Co., a firm run by former Liberal MP Frank Baylis that subcontracted a $237.3 million order for pandemic ventilators: "There was a lot of money."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)