Tom Mulcair: When you're cornered and need to stall, you name a committee. Trudeau is following that rule.
It appears that Justin Trudeau鈥檚 coverup of Chinese government interference in Canadian elections is going to drag on, at least for a while.
In government (any government) there鈥檚 a golden rule: when you鈥檙e cornered and need to stall, you name a committee.
Justin Trudeau is following that rule in naming a "special rapporteur." A high sounding but empty announcement that will not allow Canadians to get to the bottom of exactly what the Chinese Communist Party may have orchestrated to influence our elections.
Having thus far refused to take any serious action to investigate Beijing鈥檚 interference in our fundamental democratic institutions, Trudeau is now trying to get the heat off himself, by delegating what should be his own job as head of government, to someone else.
Trudeau says that it鈥檚 the special rapporteur who鈥檒l decide whether or not there should be a full inquiry into Chinese government meddling in our democracy. What an unprecedented abandonment of responsibility by Trudeau!
In answer to a French question, Trudeau let the cat out of the bag when he said that maybe the special rapporteur will decide that the best way to look at foreign interference in our elections is NOT to have an inquiry!
The whole thing appears to be an exercise in sleight of hand that nobody, except other members of his Liberal government, is buying.
During his announcement, Pablo Rodriguez, Melanie Joly and Dominic LeBlanc stood beside Trudeau like potted plants and didn鈥檛 say a single word.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a news conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Monday, March 6, 2023. Trudeau is calling on the committee of parliamentarians that reviews matters of national security and the national intelligence watchdog to independently investigate concerns about foreign interference in Canada. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Probably better for them and their future careers. Marco Mendicino got, literally, a big pat on the back from JustinTrudeau for helping to run interference during the news conference.
While 70 per cent of Canadians are troubled by the CSIS reports about Chinese interference in our elections, Trudeau has used one of his own favourite tactics: double down.
Everyone is saying the same thing? Trudeau tells them they鈥檙e all wrong in his patented teacher-talking-to-a-child tone.
Where Trudeau really pushes his luck and undermines his own announcement is when he says that the members of the panel that looked at the last election were independent. They were his employees!
If his special rapporteur is as independent as them, Trudeau is wasting everyone鈥檚 time.
Of course the worst part was when he tried to say that Morris Rosenberg, who wrote the recent review of the panel鈥檚 work, was also independent.
Don鈥檛 get me wrong, I鈥檝e had occasion to work with Rosenberg at l'Universite de Montreal and he鈥檚 outstanding. But Rosenberg also headed-up the Pierre Trudeau Foundation for years, not exactly a reassuring sign of independence from this Trudeau.
One of the lead journalists of the series of articles on the CSIS reports of Chinese government interference, Robert Fife, was asked by last week why he thought Trudeau was trying so hard to block a full inquiry. Fife鈥檚 answer was unambiguous: because a full inquiry could hurt Trudeau and the Liberals.
But if the Conservatives think that there鈥檚 no downside to going after Trudeau, then they missed one important detail in Trudeau鈥檚 meandering press conference.
When Trudeau intones about the grave dangers of 鈥渪enophobia and fear mongering,鈥 he knows exactly what he鈥檚 doing. It鈥檚 a game invented by the Liberals and like the proverbial fly, Poilievre should avoid this particular invitation to enter the spider鈥檚 parlour.
The Liberals know how to handle every fold and angle they鈥檝e woven into the Canadian multiculturalism web without getting trapped. Critics railed when Trudeau proclaimed that Canada is now a post-national country. He was stating an emerging demographic and sociological fact that is insufficiently understood.
The realities of diaspora politics, from radio stations and social media targeting cultural communities in their home language, to well-oiled schemes to influence and cajole during elections and leadership races, are now part and parcel of Canadian institutional life.
The role of diasporas in bringing about change is now an area of serious study. Canadian academic Dr. Matthew H. Godwin is a program lead at the and his recently published shows the importance of understanding the phenomenon.
The Conservatives are a very blunt instrument trying to till this fertile electoral soil. Since Jason Kenney left Ottawa, there has been no one in the blue ranks who knows the contours and the far reaches of our country鈥檚 numerous ethnocultural landscape.
Trudeau is virtue signaling to the nearly two million Canadians of Chinese origin that he鈥檚 on their side. Everytime someone says 鈥淐hinese鈥 and not 鈥淐hinese government鈥 he knows what to do: defend those individual Canadians who may indeed feel targeted.
It鈥檚 been that way with First Nations, Inuit and M茅tis Canadians. Most already distrust Poilievre because of the horrible statements he made on the very day of the residential schools apology in Parliament. He has since apologized for those, but his recent visit to the , with its own history of downplaying the genocide of the residential school system, has left most of their 1.5 million votes on the Liberal side of the ledger.
So, too, for many Muslim Canadians.The debacle surrounding the appointment of Amira Elghawaby may have hurt Trudeau in Quebec, in the Muslim community many see him as having stood up for them. Poilievre鈥檚 strident tone may well have been taken personally. The Muslim community also represents nearly two million votes.
Three Conservative MPs have lunch with a German Euro-MP and Holocaust denier and Poilievre throws them under the bus, only to be reprimanded by members of the hard right media who usually idolize him.
, the respected lobby of Canada鈥檚 Jewish community, blew the whistle on the meeting which is really bad news for Poilievre, who鈥檇 worked assiduously to maintain Harper鈥檚 excellent rapport with that community.
Trudeau is just waiting patiently as the Conservatives keep helping the Bloc Quebecois stall . Despite its flaws, that law is largely seen by the one million Francophones outside Quebec as an important and helpful updating of The Official languages Act. Polievre could wind up losing any hope of getting their support as well.
You can鈥檛 throw millions of votes in the wastebasket and hope to win an election. The math just doesn鈥檛 hold. Poilievre may revile the mainstream media, but he鈥檚 losing the votes of mainstream Canadians.
Trudeau鈥檚 press conference announcing his special rapporteur turned rapidly partisan with potshots at both Harper (didn鈥檛 he leave politics?) and, of course, Poilievre himself.
That, indeed, is what this is all about: partisan politics.
Trudeau is trying to remove debris from the runway so he can launch an election sooner, rather than later. This is a big piece of debris.
Earlier during the day on Monday, Poilievre held his own news conference to introduce private a member鈥檚 bill to ban medical assistance in dying in cases of mental illness.
The Liberals had already punted that one forward, but Poilievre wasn鈥檛 going to let that stop him. He knows it鈥檚 a live-wire issue for many voters and he will do whatever he can to keep it active, the better to be seen fighting it.
Everyone is positioning right now.
Trudeau鈥檚 window for calling an election has been narrowing. He鈥檚 well into his eighth year in power.
A revised electoral map will soon be adopted and it provides for the creation of new ridings, including several in Alberta. Those are expected to go to the Conservatives. However, if Trudeau calls the election less than seven months after the adoption of the new map, it鈥檚 the old electoral map that will still apply in the next election. That math is tempting for the Big Red Machine.
Lost in all of these partisan calculations, of course, is the fact that there is already sufficient information that there were indeed Chinese government activities that sought to influence the outcome in numerous ridings.
The issue of Chinese government interference is, in many ways, a useful distraction to help keep voters鈥 minds off the 28 per cent increase in the civil service and $20 billion a year in outsourcing since Trudeau became prime minister. Who knew that competence could be an electoral issue?
But Canadians don鈥檛 want to be distracted, they want Trudeau to defend our democracy. That begins with a full inquiry into exactly what happened during the last election so it can never happen again by any country and with any diaspora community.
Anything less than a full inquiry is an abdication of responsibility by Trudeau.
Tom Mulcair was the leader of the federal New Democratic Party of Canada between 2012 and 2017
IN DEPTH
Jagmeet Singh pulls NDP out of deal with Trudeau Liberals, takes aim at Poilievre Conservatives
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has pulled his party out of the supply-and-confidence agreement that had been helping keep Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's minority Liberals in power.
'Not the result we wanted': Trudeau responds after surprise Conservative byelection win in Liberal stronghold
Conservative candidate Don Stewart winning the closely-watched Toronto-St. Paul's federal byelection, and delivering a stunning upset to Justin Trudeau's candidate Leslie Church in the long-time Liberal riding, has sent political shockwaves through both parties.
'We will go with the majority': Liberals slammed by opposition over proposal to delay next election
The federal Liberal government learned Friday it might have to retreat on a proposal within its electoral reform legislation to delay the next vote by one week, after all opposition parties came out to say they can't support it.
Budget 2024 prioritizes housing while taxing highest earners, deficit projected at $39.8B
In an effort to level the playing field for young people, in the 2024 federal budget, the government is targeting Canada's highest earners with new taxes in order to help offset billions in new spending to enhance the country's housing supply and social supports.
'One of the greatest': Former prime minister Brian Mulroney commemorated at state funeral
Prominent Canadians, political leaders, and family members remembered former prime minister and Progressive Conservative titan Brian Mulroney as an ambitious and compassionate nation-builder at his state funeral on Saturday.
Opinion
opinion Don Martin: Gusher of Liberal spending won't put out the fire in this dumpster
A Hail Mary rehash of the greatest hits from the Trudeau government鈥檚 three-week travelling pony-show, the 2024 federal budget takes aim at reversing the party鈥檚 popularity plunge in the under-40 set, writes political columnist Don Martin. But will it work before the next election?
opinion Don Martin: The doctor Trudeau dumped has a prescription for better health care
Political columnist Don Martin sat down with former federal health minister Jane Philpott, who's on a crusade to help fix Canada's broken health care system, and who declined to take any shots at the prime minister who dumped her from caucus.
opinion Don Martin: Trudeau's seeking shelter from the housing storm he helped create
While Justin Trudeau's recent housing announcements are generally drawing praise from experts, political columnist Don Martin argues there shouldn鈥檛 be any standing ovations for a prime minister who helped caused the problem in the first place.
opinion Don Martin: Poilievre has the field to himself as he races across the country to big crowds
It came to pass on Thursday evening that the confidentially predictable failure of the Official Opposition non-confidence motion went down with 204 Liberal, BQ and NDP nays to 116 Conservative yeas. But forcing Canada into a federal election campaign was never the point.
opinion Don Martin: How a beer break may have doomed the carbon tax hike
When the Liberal government chopped a planned beer excise tax hike to two per cent from 4.5 per cent and froze future increases until after the next election, says political columnist Don Martin, it almost guaranteed a similar carbon tax move in the offing.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Conservatives call on Elon Musk to step in after Liberals provide loan to Ottawa-based satellite operator
A $2.14-billion federal loan for an Ottawa-based satellite operator has Canadian politicians arguing about whether American billionaire Elon Musk poses a national security risk.
Sunken superyacht believed to contain watertight safes with sensitive intelligence data
Specialist divers surveying the wreckage of the US$40 million superyacht that sank off Sicily in August, killing seven people including British tech tycoon Mike Lynch, have asked for heightened security to guard the vessel, over concerns that sensitive data locked in its safes may interest foreign governments, multiple sources told CNN.
Myths busted and lessons learned: John Vennavally-Rao on his surgery to reverse his ostomy
Twenty-seven year 麻豆影视 reporter and anchor John Vennavally-Rao shares his story of what it was like to have an ostomy bag as part of his health-care battle. 'I鈥檓 grateful for what it did to extend my life,' he writes in a personal column for CTVNews.ca.
The British Columbia election campaign is set to officially start today, with Lt.-Gov. Janet Austin issuing the writ for the Oct. 19 vote.
A northern Ontario man is facing a $12,000 fine after illegally shooting a moose near the Batchawan River.
Heavy metal exposure could increase cardiovascular disease risk, study finds
A new study is adding to emerging research showing that exposure to metals such as cadmium, uranium and copper may also be associated with the leading cause of death worldwide, cardiovascular disease.
Unusual flippered feet are making their way into the Saint Lawrence River this weekend. Led by underwater explorer and filmmaker Nathalie Lasselin, volunteer divers are combing the riverbed near Beauharnois in Mont茅r茅gie to remove hundreds of tires that have been polluting the aquatic environment for decades.
Hezbollah targets base near Haifa after Israeli strike in Beirut killed 37, including top commander
The Lebanese militant group Hezbollah announced that it fired a barrage of missiles at a military base deep inside Israel early Sunday following an Israeli airstrike more than a day earlier that killed at least 37 people, including one of the militant group鈥檚 senior leaders as well as women and children.
A sea lion swam free after a rescue team disentangled it near Vancouver Island earlier this week.
Local Spotlight
Cole Haas is more than just an avid fan of the F.W. Johnson Wildcats football team. He's a fixture on the sidelines, a source of encouragement, and a beloved member of the team.
Getting a photograph of a rainbow? Common. Getting a photo of a lightning strike? Rare. Getting a photo of both at the same time? Extremely rare, but it happened to a Manitoba photographer this week.
An anonymous business owner paid off the mortgage for a New Brunswick not-for-profit.
They say a dog is a man鈥檚 best friend. In the case of Darren Cropper, from Bonfield, Ont., his three-year-old Siberian husky and golden retriever mix named Bear literally saved his life.
A growing group of brides and wedding photographers from across the province say they have been taken for tens of thousands of dollars by a Barrie, Ont. wedding photographer.
Paleontologists from the Royal B.C. Museum have uncovered "a trove of extraordinary fossils" high in the mountains of northern B.C., the museum announced Thursday.
The search for a missing ancient 28-year-old chocolate donkey ended with a tragic discovery Wednesday.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is celebrating an important milestone in the organization's history: 50 years since the first women joined the force.
It's been a whirlwind of joyful events for a northern Ontario couple who just welcomed a baby into their family and won the $70 million Lotto Max jackpot last month.