Suspect Appointee Was Paid

Cabinet’s deputy secretary yesterday refused to tell MPs how much was paid to a disgraced Chief Human Rights Commissioner who described Muslim terrorism as a “well-calculated strategy.” Birju Dattani was appointed to the $394,000-a year post but never took office: “I understand in this case the Government of Canada saw fit to offer him a compensation package.”

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Pick Donor From 100 Others

The former chair of a now-disbanded “green slush fund” was selected from some 100 applicants for the job, the Commons public accounts committee was told yesterday. MPs questioned why cabinet chose Annette Verschuren, a Liberal Party donor with a conflict of interest: “It appeared one of the qualifications required to be appointed to this board is that you have a conflict.”

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Feds Withhold Parks Figures

Parks Canada will not disclose details of its forest management prior to a July 24 wildfire that burned Jasper, Alta. Managers four years ago warned of “dead trees and the fuel load” at Jasper National Park: “Obviously one of the big concerns is the dead trees.”

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Fear Climate Food Shortages

Canadians fear climate change will lead to food shortages here, says in-house Privy Council research. Figures show Canada has been self-sufficient in food since Confederation and is one of the world’s largest food exporters: “Food is abundant with plenty to spare.”

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Libs “Too Weak,” Says Singh

Cabinet is “too weak, too selfish” to deal with, New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh said yesterday in dissolving a vote pact with the Prime Minister. Singh’s formal rejection of the Supply And Confidence Agreement came nine months after cabinet reneged on its terms: “Do you now have to start thinking about maybe calling an election?”

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Lawyer Erases ‘Dog Pee’ Post

A senior Department of Justice lawyer who compared journalists critical of the Government of Canada to animal urine deleted his remarks on LinkedIn. Senior Counsel Alexander Gay, author of the ‘dog pee’ post, earlier told an interviewer he was fit for appointment as a federal judge: “We are capable.”

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Name Another Dirty Supplier

A former Department of Industry manager has pleaded guilty to breach of trust without jail time, RCMP said yesterday. Evidence in the latest contracting scandal showed Marc Primeau of Long Sault, Ont. paid federal contracts to his own company and pocketed a 39 percent profit: “Is it not true at this very minute there are middle men just soaking Canadian taxpayers?”

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Future’s Uncertain: Macklem

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem yesterday said Canada’s economic future is uncertain and warned there “will always be new shocks.” His remarks followed repeated failed forecasts that downplayed inflation risks: “It’s not like we got everything right.”

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Plan Big Staff Meet On Equity

The Privy Council Office plans a nationwide videoconference this fall “to reaffirm values and ethics” for federal employees. It follows disclosure of an internal report detailing crude bigotry by managers including use of the n-word: “Racialized employees experience a very, very different public service.”

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Calls Media Critics Dog Urine

The Department of Justice yesterday had no comment after its senior counsel wrote a vulgar social media post comparing media critics to animal urine. Remarks by Alexander Gay followed a department pledge that journalists “should never be subjected to intimidation or harassment for doing their critical work.”

Attorney General Arif Virani’s office did not reply to questions. Virani last May 3 on World Press Freedom Day said his department celebrated “the important work of journalists.”

“Freedom of the press is a cornerstone of democracy and enshrined in our Charter Of Rights And Freedoms,” wrote the Attorney General. “Journalists should never be subjected to intimidation or harassment for doing their critical work.”

Counsel Gay’s LinkedIn post Sunday was in reaction to a Sun Media commentary on Blacklock’s Reporter v. Attorney General, a case currently before the Federal Court of Appeal. The August 31 article by columnist Lorne Gunter was critical of officialdom.

“The only thing bizarre is the journalist that wrote this article and made up some random facts,” wrote Counsel Gay. “My late father would call this yellow journalism which I believe had something to do with a newspaper that was only good enough to train a dog to pee outdoors.”

The Department of Justice Values And Ethics Code mandates “respectful communication” by employees. Federal lawyers must “conduct themselves in a manner that does not harm the reputation of the department,” it says.

“As public servants we contribute to good governance, democracy and the well-being of Canadian society,” says the Code Of Conduct. “We are committed to respecting the law and upholding the highest standards of integrity and fairness.”

Made Up Urine Reference

Justice department employees must “uphold the public trust” and be civil in dealing with Canadians, continued the Code. “Treating all people with respect, dignity and fairness is fundamental to our relationship with the Canadian public,“ it said.

Authorities did not comment on whether the ‘dog pee’ post complied with the Code Of Conduct. “Journalists are the bedrock of our democracy,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said May 3 in observance of World Press Freedom Day.

“Canada will always stand up for journalists in the defence of media freedom and against misinformation and disinformation,” said the Prime Minister.  “Journalists must be able to do their jobs free from threat or intimidation.”

Counsel Gay made up the claim that “yellow journalism” referred to animal urine. Records show the phrase originated as a 19th century pejorative against the New York Journal. The now-defunct daily published a comic strip called The Yellow Kid, “the adventures of an engaging slum urchin,” wrote William Swanberg, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of the 1961 volume Citizen Hearst, a biography of Journal publisher William Randolph Hearst.

Hearst sponsored “Yellow Kids” fundraisers for orphans and an 1896 “Yellow Fellow” cross-country bicycle race. Critics adopted “yellow journalism” in criticizing Journal coverage of the 1898 Spanish-American War and dubbed Hearst the “yellow kid” in his 1902 campaign for the U.S. Congress.

By Staff

Guilbeault Skirts Questioning

Liberal and Bloc Québécois MPs yesterday saved Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault from committee questioning over business dealings with a subsidized Montréal company. The Commons public accounts committee by a 6-5 vote rejected a Conservative motion to question Guilbeault: “Where there is smoke there is fire.”

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Vow No More Inside Dealing

The president of the National Research Council yesterday promised taxpayers “the highest standards” on ethics. Mitch Davies’ remarks followed audits of conflicts in green technology funding: “Canadians are skeptical when they hear senior civil servants uttering words like, ‘trust us.'”

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Pushed Hard On Taxing Rich

Privy Council in-house research prodded Canadians to consider raising taxes on the rich, records show. Focus group researchers weeks before cabinet’s April 16 capital gains budget asked people “what they thought of when they heard the term ‘wealthiest Canadians.’”

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