A former deputy industry minister yesterday denied any responsibility for rampant conflicts at the disgraced federal agency Sustainable Development Technology Canada. Retiree John Knubley, testifying by videoconference at the Commons public accounts committee, appeared agitated as MPs accused him of a coverup: "I am not a lawyer."
Ask Why MP Kept In Caucus
The Conservative Party yesterday in its final submission to the China inquiry questioned why Prime Minister Justin Trudeau twice approved a Liberal nomination for MP Han Dong (Don Valley North, Ont.) despite learning he was under security surveillance. Political aides vetoed Dong’s appointment to a committee on China relations but permitted him to attend four years’ worth of secret Liberal caucus meetings: "Liberals knew."
Says Pin’s Like Legion Poppy
New Democrat MP Heather McPherson (Edmonton Strathcona) yesterday was reprimanded by the Commons Speaker for wearing a lapel pin proclaiming support for Palestinians. MPs jeered after McPherson compared her "solidarity" pin to wearing a Remembrance Day poppy: "No!"
Minister On Parenting Advice
Addictions Minister Ya’ara Saks yesterday said families across Canada often ask her for parenting advice. Children “are feeling immense anxiety” due to the internet and climate change, she told reporters: "We can’t always protect our kids from the hardships they may face."
Banks Face Disclosure Orders
The Department of Finance will order banks to disclose how much they pocket in non-sufficient funds fees on chequing accounts -- it could be as high as a half billion a year, said the department -- with a new cap on NSF charges. Service fees overall may account for more than a tenth of earnings by Canada’s largest banks, said a federal report: "There is very limited information published by banks."
“Stay Out,” Singh Tells Gov’t
Twenty-five New Democrat MPs oppose any cabinet intervention in rotating postal strikes, says Party leader Jagmeet Singh. The last mail strike six years ago ended with back-to-work legislation after five weeks: "Stay out of this."
Asks Parliament To Say Sorry
Parliament owes Canada an apology for the housing crisis, says a Commons petition sponsored by a former Government House Leader. Liberal MP Bardish Chagger (Waterloo, Ont.) did not comment: "There must be accountability and a public apology."
Lots Of Mistakes At The CRA
The Canada Revenue Agency continues to make thousands of errors in assessing taxes, records show. The latest figures follow a 2016 audit that found taxpayers had a 6 in 10 chance of successfully appealing an assessment: 'Taxpayers have a right.'
Say “Patients,” Not “Addicts”
Drug addicts should be called patients instead, says the Federal Housing Advocate. Marie-Josée Houle in a report to Parliament said the noun “addicts” was insensitive and judgmental: "Words we use matter."
Sunday Poem: “Trespassers”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “My hairdresser pressed his fingers against my scalp; my teller had her eyes in my transactions; my plumber had his tools in my bathtub…”
Review: History By The Spoken Word
It was a horrific year, 1917: conscription and coal rationing in Canada, carnage in France, revolution in Russia, unrestricted submarine warfare on the Atlantic. Steamships were torpedoed at the rate of ten a day. One British liner bound for Halifax, the Rappahannock, vanished without a trace.
This was the moment French Foreign Minister René Viviani spoke to Parliament. “Every speech is a freeze-frame of history in the making,” writes J. Patrick Boyer in Foreign Voices In The House; “When Réne Viviani spoke in 1917, his vibrant voice had to fill the entire chamber because no amplifying speakers delivered his words to the audience.”
Boyer captures the event, May 12, 1917. Canadian casualties were 13,000 a month. Twenty-seven MPs were in uniform. One had been killed in action, another won the Victoria Cross. The MP for Beauce, Que., Henri Béland, could not attend the Commons that day. He was held in a German prison camp.
MPs Block Nazi Naming, 6-5
Liberal and Bloc Québécois MPs yesterday by a 6-5 vote blocked a committee motion asking that cabinet disclose a secret blacklist of Nazi collaborators let into Canada after 1945. The majority on the Commons heritage committee expressed unease in identifying suspected war criminals: "This is an extremely delicate situation."
Won’t Take Orders On CBC
Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge yesterday refused to say if she will comply with a Commons committee order banning future CBC executive bonuses while the Crown broadcaster pleads financial hardship. CBC management cut 346 jobs on complaints of “chronic underfunding” while approving $14.9 million in bonuses: "There is a media crisis."
Electric Subsidies A Hard Sell
Canadians in federal focus groups question the billions budgeted in subsidies for the electric auto industry. Cabinet proposes that by 2035 all new car buyers must purchase a zero emission vehicle: "A number expressed concerns."
Ask Who Pays For Drug Plan
Cabinet yesterday appointed a five-member panel to find ways to pay for a universal pharmacare program. The final report is not expected until after the next general election: "There is lots to work out."



