Thursday, 27 October 2022

PUBLIC ORDER EMERGENCY COMMISSION INQUIRY Day 11 - October 27, 2022

 
 

Jagmeet Singh Will Back Trudeau No Matter What Outcome

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Oct 26, 2022
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No matter the outcome at the Emergency Act Inquiry at the Public Order Emergency Commission Jagmeet Singh will back Trudeau. "simply because it was the wrong decision wouldn't be enough for us to break, or to force the country into an election." 
 
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229 Comments

Methinks you know as well as I that YOU and Jagmeet Singh have been receiving the same emails lately N'esy Pas?
 
Furthermore everybody was talking about what Jagmeet Singh said to on CTV days before the light dawned on your Marblehead 
 
 

NDP unlikely to pull support for Liberals if commission concludes use of Emergencies Act was unjustified: Singh

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says it is unlikely that his party would pull their support for the Liberals if the Public Order Emergency Commission examining the federal government's invocation of the Emergencies Act concludes that doing so was not justified.

In an interview on CTV's Question Period, Singh said the New Democrats will reserve their judgement until all of the facts are aired by the national inquiry. But, hypothetically speaking, "simply because it was the wrong decision wouldn't be enough for us to break, or to force the country into an election." 

The NDP backed the Liberals' invocation of the Emergencies Act, citing national security concerns, allowing police and officials to use unprecedented powers to end the weeks-long protests.

Singh said that he doesn't want to presuppose what Commissioner Paul Rouleau will conclude in his report due to Parliament by Feb. 20, and that his party is fully on board for getting to the bottom of whether or not invoking the Emergencies Act was, as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has called it, a "last resort." 

"We've always said we want to get to the bottom of if it was the only option, if there was other options, if there were better approaches that could have been taken. And we completely support a full and transparent investigation into that," Singh said.

In his opening statement, Rouleau said that the focus of the commission will remain "squarely on the decision of the federal government." Particularly: Why did it declare an emergency? How did it use its powers? And were those actions appropriate?

The expectation is that the final report to Parliament will inform how to prevent similar events from happening again, and will advise on whether the Emergencies Act and connected regulatory framework need amendments. 

The NDP leader said that his basis for backing the government's decision in February was based on the evidence known at that time.

"We knew that the convoy was a serious problem for workers, for our economy, the shutdowns at the bridges and the borders had resulted in massive losses... So there was a serious harm. And in Ottawa, what was going on was horrific," Singh said. "So stopping it was something that I supported. And it's clear that the invocation resulted in that situation being resolved."

As the commission continues to hear testimony shedding new light on the circumstances that led up to the government invoking the Emergencies Act, Singh said it's clear that there were steps that the police could have taken a lot earlier.

In deciding to enter into a mutually-beneficial confidence-and-supply agreement one month after Trudeau revoked the Emergences Act, the NDP committed to propping up the minority Liberals in the House of Commons in exchange for progress on longstanding NDP priorities. 

While the deal has recently been tested with the advancement of a trio of affordability commitments, Singh said the NDP "always have the right to withdraw support," whether because of any potential revelations from this inquiry, or a failure from the government to follow through on elements of their deal. 


 
 
 
 
 

LIVE PUBLIC ORDER EMERGENCY COMISSION INQUIRY Day 11 - October 27, 2022

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Public Order Emergency Commission Documents https://publicorderemergencycommissio... 
 
February 14, 2022 Declaration of Public Order Emergency: Explanation pursuant to subsection 58(1) of the Emergencies Act
 
 
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RenegadeTrudeau Should Be Paying For This Out Of His Trust Fund
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NDP unlikely to pull support for Liberals if commission concludes use of Emergencies Act was unjustified: Singh ctvnews.ca/politics/ndp-u
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Jagmeet Singh Will Back Trudeau No Matter What Outcome
No matter the outcome at the Emergency Act Inquiry at the Public Order Emergency Commission Jagmeet Singh will back Trudeau. "simply because it was the wrong...
Did I hear these dudes brag of being Trolls?
 
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https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/rcmp-boss-hurt-g20-security-efforts-senior-mountie-says/article1215297/

RCMP boss hurt G20 security efforts, senior Mountie says

Follow Colin Freeze on Twitter: @colinfreeze
Follow Daniel Leblanc on Twitter: @danlebla  

Parliamentary affairs reporter

A senior Mountie commander told the federal government that RCMP Commissioner William Elliott "disrupted" the federal government's billion-dollar security operation for the G8 and G20 summits - simply by showing up for the events.

"Despite being advised not to attend the summit command centres on June 25, 2010, the commissioner chose to attend, and in doing so, completely disrupted operations," Mike McDonell, then an RCMP assistant commissioner, wrote in a letter to Public Safety Minister Vic Toews.

The scathing complaint was sent last July, just a couple of weeks after the summits. It sparked a federal review of Mr. Elliott's leadership, but its contents at the time were not known publicly, and a copy was only recently obtained by The Globe and Mail.

Then commanding the RCMP's Ontario operations, Mr. McDonell raised a litany of criticisms of Mr. Elliott's leadership. The most pointed being that Canada's top cop may have had a negative impact on the biggest security operation in Canadian history.

Before the summits, the letter says, the commissioner kept his distance from all G8-G20 planning in Southern Ontario. In June, according to the letter, he suddenly came from Ottawa to visit his security forces just as they were scrambling to move U.S. President Barack Obama and dozens of other world leaders from cottage country to Toronto, and on a day when Black Bloc protesters were running wild in the streets.

The commissioner's visit to the command centre in Barrie, Ont., "caused a distraction to the RCMP and Canadian Forces personnel preparing to transport Internationally Protected Persons," the McDonell letter says. Mr. Elliot's visit to the downtown Toronto command centre also caused a degree of turmoil for local cops "preparing to respond/responding to protest activities in Toronto," the letter says.

The McDonell letter and complaints from several senior RCMP commanders led the Conservative government to hire an outsider to review Mr. Elliott's leadership.

Although chastened over angry outbursts against his subordinates, Mr. Elliott survived the review. Appointed by the Tories to be the force's first civilian leader three years ago, he is now looking to shake up the RCMP's upper ranks.

One of the people who complained about Mr. Elliott, Deputy Commissioner Raf Souccar, has been told it might be best for him to leave the force, but no decision has been made, sources said.

It is possible that Mr. Souccar will remain in the RCMP - or be seconded to another organization - after many current and former police officials, including Conservative candidate Julian Fantino, lobbied Mr. Elliott and other government officials on his behalf.

"He has faced huge pressure that he is not wanted, but Mr. Elliott has also faced pushback," a source said.

The RCMP and Mr. Elliott would not comment on the McDonell letter on Monday.

"We will be moving forward in the near future with a number of changes to the structure and makeup of our senior management team," deputy commissioner Al Nause, the Mounties' new head of human-resources, said in a recent e-mail.

In his letter, Mr. McDonell accused Mr. Elliott of running a "dictatorship-like regime" and presiding over an era of institutional "inertia" that keeps the RCMP from delivering on promised changes.

In the letter, Mr. Elliott was also faulted for dressing down subordinates in a "brutal, disrespectful, intimidating and careless" manner, to the point that senior commanders suffered something akin to "battered wife syndrome."

The letter further said that Mr. Elliott has failed to make necessary friendships with U.S. police partners.

Writing a letter to the Public Safety Minster was one of Mr. McDonell's last acts as a Mountie. After 35 years on the force, he retired in July, trading in the red serge to drive a black-and-white squad car for the Ontario Provincial Police.

He dropped four ranks to do so, but remains admired as a "cop's cop" by his friends in high places. Now an inspector, Mr. McDonell was last week fêted at his RCMP retirement party in speeches by Conservative candidate and former Toronto police chief Julian Fantino, OPP Commissioner Chris Lewis and Mr. Souccar, his former police partner.

"I leave with gratitude and I leave with an abundance of respect for the men and women of the force," Mr. McDonnell wrote to Mr. Toews in July. Nevertheless, he said he felt duty-bound to "share my observations on Commissioner Elliott's leadership."

Follow Colin Freeze on Twitter: @colinfreeze

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