• SamuelRJankis@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    As posted yesterday. At this point news outlets is purposely just churning a specific narrative.

    https://www.theglobeandmail.com/politics/article-liberals-will-not-release-names-of-parliamentarians-accused-of/

    The Public Safety Minister insisted that federal law prevents the government from releasing further information about the people at the centre of those allegations, and he urged party leaders to instead get their own classified briefings and said Canadians should have confidence that police can investigate and lay charges when warranted.

    So far, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has declined to accept a briefing, saying it would muzzle him. Instead, he says the names should be released by the government.

    • voluble
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      6 months ago

      The House partisan gamesmanship needs to be ignored if we’re going to be serious about national security and sovereignty. Canadians deserve to know if their member of Parliament wittingly aided a foreign interference operation. We need to know right now. The notion that an election could occur while undisclosed traitors are on the ballot? This would be catastrophic.

      There are absolutely no excuses for the current government’s horrific file on foreign interference:

      • Not already having a foreign agent registry in place
      • Not acting on the NSICOP report immediately
      • Attempting to discredit the NSICOP report
      • Voting against transparency and accountability on this issue at every opportunity
      • Threatening a sequel to the ‘Special Rapporteur’ circus by suggesting that an ‘internal review’ will somehow be satisfactory
      • Failing to say something even as simple as ‘Members compromised by a foreign power should be removed from Parliament’.

      There’s no good reason for any of it, and their inaction is an open invitation to China, India, and others for further interference.

      It’s impossible to agree with Minister LeBlanc. Canadians cannot have confidence that police can investigate and lay charges when warranted. The NSICOP report details how our system is configured in such a way as to make that difficult or impossible.