:
I call this meeting to order.
Welcome to meeting number 74 of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics.
Today’s meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the House order of June 23, 2022, and therefore, members can attend in person in the room and remotely using the Zoom application. Should any technical challenges arise, please advise me immediately. Please note that we may need to suspend a few minutes as we need to ensure that all members are able to participate fully.
Pursuant to Standing Order 108(3)(h) and the motion adopted by the committee on Wednesday, December 7, 2022, the committee is resuming its study of foreign interference and threats to the integrity of democratic institutions, intellectual property and the Canadian state. In accordance with the committee’s routine motion concerning connection tests for witnesses, I am informing the committee that all witnesses have completed the required connection tests in advance of the meeting.
I would now like to welcome our witnesses for the first hour today. We have, as individuals, Dean Baxendale, chief executive officer, China Democracy Foundation and of Optimum Publishing International, Thomas Juneau, associate professor, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Ottawa, and, by video conference, Andrew Mitrovica, investigative reporter.
Mr. Baxendale, the floor is yours for a five-minute opening statement.
:
Good morning. Thank you very much for inviting me.
[English]
Today I hope to provide additional insights relevant to your investigation and understanding of foreign influence in Canadian elections and other spheres of Canadian society.
Today I will speak with two hats on. One is as CEO of Optimum Publishing, which has published multiple books on human rights abuses by the Chinese Communist Party, espionage operations by the MSS and the PLA, and triad organized crime and money laundering in Canada and other nations around the world. During this time, I've learned more than I ever wanted to know about foreign interference in Canadian affairs.
The second is as CEO of the China Democracy Fund, whose mission is to defend free speech by academics and journalists who fall prey to the United Front Work's disinformation and suppression operations in Canada and around the world. Countless people, from the Tibetans to the Uyghurs and the people of Hong Kong, have been oppressed and murdered and have seen their culture erased by the CCP. I stand in solidarity with their right to freedom and democracy.
I also stand as a defender of democracy here at home. Canada is at a crossroads. Will we continue to remain wilfully blind to Chinese infiltration into our elections, business, media and academia? Will we continue to abandon our fellow citizens in the Chinese diaspora to the threats, intimidation and manipulation, also known as transnational repression?
I put to you that we must exercise option two. If we do not, we risk becoming a captive state, losing our sovereignty and our ability to make decisions in the best interests of our citizens.
Today, I am going to talk about one of the most important threats and tactics used by the CCP. It is called elite capture. This is the co-opting of leading individuals and public figures to view the actions and goals of the CCP in a positive light and to advance pro-PRC positions within their spheres of influence. In some cases, these persons are bribed or blackmailed, but in most cases they are simply flattered, supported in their careers or befriended by CCP operatives or agents working on behalf of the United Front. Thus they become witting or unwitting agents of the CCP.
Targets for elite capture fall into three categories: those who are already friends, those who are neutral and could be positively predisposed towards the PRC, and enemies of the state. These would include people like and the suppression operation that was conducted against the Conservatives in the last election.
Former minister and ambassador to China John McCallum became a poster child for the regime—a dream politician who was successfully co-opted by the CCP. Like many, he fell victim to their special treatment and ultimately came to believe that he was a chosen emissary and only he could best relate the goals and objectives of the regime in diplomatic circles here in Canada. This was illustrated in Hidden Hand, which is published by Optimum.
If we cast our minds back to the 1980s, it is easy to see how western elites were taken in. Over two decades prior, U.S. President Richard Nixon famously visited China as part of an effort to engage the country and make it an ally. The west had a bigger enemy—the former Soviet Union. China was seen as both an economic and geopolitical opportunity. Western leaders either failed to see or wilfully ignored the fact that China had its own agenda, which it deployed not through military might, but through propaganda, economics and soft power.
Carolyn Bartholomew, the chair of the powerful U.S.-China Economic and Security Review Commission in D.C., said that they sold them on a win-win and many business and academic leaders believed that China would reform its treatment of religious and ethnic minorities, liberalize its country and embrace democracy. This was the prevailing academic theory. They believed—apparently naively—that the CCP would indeed reform and embrace the ideals of a progressive democracy. She expressed this publicly in a human rights panel that was hosted by MLI, Optimum and the CDF in 2021.
If elites were blind, intelligence agencies were not. Starting in the 1990s, CSIS had identified the threats, but the Americans began their own operational investigations, including Operation Dragon Lord, which was an American operation focused not only on the U.S. but on Canada and Australia. Operation Dragon Lord was a multi-faceted agency probe by the U.S. intelligence agencies in the late 1990s. These investigations were, in part, in response to the work being conducted by the RCMP and CSIS here in Canada.
Garry Clement, Brian McAdam and Michel Juneau-Katsuya, as well as countless other intelligence agents were investigating and writing countless reports on the nexus between organized crime, Chinese business tycoons and the PLA and MSS operations in Canada. The executive brief was obtained by Optimum authors Ina Mitchell and Scott McGregor from a former federal and provincial government lawyer. The U.S. was concerned about national security and the threat emanating directly from Canada. Much later, agencies in Canada identified these linkages and determined that Vancouver had become the North American headquarters for infiltration operations by the Chinese Communist Party.
As part of my testimony today, I've submitted the first page of the Operation Dragon Lord memo. It identifies FBI and NSA case numbers. They were investigating the relationship between the Canadian business leaders Paul Desmarais and Peter Munk, former prime minister Jean Chrétien, the Canada China Business Council, the China International Trust and Investment Corporation, known heroin kingpin Lo Hsing Han and arms dealer Robert Kuok.
This is the third time in the past month that I am appearing before a House committee to discuss foreign interference. In each case, I focused my remarks not on the threat but on possible solutions.
The first time I was at PROC, in May, I talked in general terms about how transparency in national security is—or should be—an essential part of our arsenal to counter foreign interference.
The second time I was at PROC, earlier this week, I proposed changes to the architecture and governance of national security in Canada to try to address the structural problems in the interface between intelligence and policy through, for example, the establishment of a national security committee of cabinet, a stronger role for the NSIA and specific measures to enhance policy literacy in the intelligence community and intelligence literacy in the policy and political worlds. I also recommended that the government launch a comprehensive public review of its national security policy.
Given the nature of the important work of this committee, I hope in my brief remarks to dig a bit deeper into some of the transparency issues surrounding national security. This is the focus of some of my academic work. I was also, from 2019 to 2022, the co-chair of the national security transparency advisory group, which is an independent body that advises the deputy minister of public safety and the broader intelligence community on how to enhance transparency. We produced three reports when I was there, and I think they can be relevant to some of your work.
My starting point, as it was at PROC three weeks ago, is that transparency is—or could be, if it were more properly leveraged—a crucial enabler of national security and one of our key assets in the fight against foreign interference. Let me focus quickly on three areas in which I think we could very specifically do better.
First, given the nature of this committee's work, Canada’s access to information system is broken and dysfunctional, and it fails to achieve its objectives. This has several negative implications broadly but also including on the national security front. It prevents more informed public debate, yet that would be essential to building national security literacy among Canadians, including parliamentarians. This is an essential component of the societal resilience that is our first line of defence against foreign interference and other threats. This dysfunctionality in the ATI system is a symptom. It is illustrative of how the government at the political and bureaucratic levels does not take transparency issues seriously enough.
Second, Canada performs very poorly at the level of declassification. That means declassification of historical records, many of which remain locked up for decades for no valid reason. More generally, as we discussed at PROC and elsewhere, we suffer from an epidemic of overclassification. Again, this acts as an important obstacle to raising awareness among Canadians, including parliamentarians, and an obstacle to better-informed public debate, both in terms of understanding the nature of the threats we face and also in terms of how to mitigate them. It is also, at a more operational level, a major problem inside government. It stymies and slows the flow of crucial information. Again, this amounts to shooting ourselves in the foot because of our inability to enact reforms.
Third, and last, there is a need to seriously rethink how the government communicates with Canadians through its public affairs apparatus. There is not enough of a culture of transparency in how this is done. The emphasis too often is on risk minimization. The result, more often than not, is meaningless speaking points, which often miss media deadlines. Again, this is a missed opportunity to better inform Canadians. It can even be counterproductive by feeding cynicism. This is a problem in general, but also from a national security perspective.
Often, the government communicates with Canadians directly, for example through social media, but very often the government reaches Canadians through the media, which then plays the role of a transmission belt. By failing to provide the media with as much information as possible—quality information and not boilerplate—in a timely manner, we again miss an opportunity to raise the level of national security literacy. Also, in trying to counter foreign interference, we should include much more and better engagement with local and ethnic media—and not just national media—to reach those vulnerable groups that are the targets of foreign interference.
We are far too shy in doing this. We should, for example, fight disinformation by flooding the marketplace of ideas with transparency. That is, again, our main advantage against autocracies, including China. Think about how the U.K. brilliantly used strategic disclosures of intelligence in the run-up to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. This is a tool that we massively underuse.
I will conclude with two points. Transparency is hard. It takes time, human resources, money and effort, but if you think about it in pragmatic as opposed to abstract moral terms, it is an investment that pays off down the road, even if in the short term it is a burden. Second, change must come from the top. In the absence of political cover and political support, the bureaucracy ultimately is limited in what it can do.
[Translation]
Thank you very much.
Good morning.
I have not agreed to appear here or at other committees to act as a proxy for any side in what has devolved into a rabid partisan fixation for or against a public inquiry. Instead, I am here to raise an alarm and say something that might help you and Canadians navigate reports about Chinese interference, a matter that I once spent a lot of time reporting about as an investigative journalist. I’m also doing this in the faint hope that a few of you will hear what I have to say and then do something about it.
I have been a reporter and writer for almost 40 years. For much of that time, I was an investigative reporter at CTV, CBC, The Globe and Mail and The Walrus magazine. I have written a lot about intelligence services. That work led to a book called Covert Entry: Spies, Lies and Crimes Inside Canada’s Secret Service. It is one of only two books of any consequence written about CSIS. My book exposed CSIS for its systemic laziness, nepotism, corruption, racism, lying and law-breaking that you and other Canadians haven’t heard or read much about lately.
I am familiar with China's covert influence campaigns. I wrote a series of front-page stories about Chinese influence efforts throughout Canadian society while I was at The Globe and Mail in the late 1990s and early 2000s. It’s an old story. That reporting culminated in a story about a joint RCMP-CSIS probe called Project Sidewinder.
Sidewinder was intriguing for several reasons. Its central finding, that the PRC was working with triads to infiltrate almost every aspect of Canadian life, was so controversial that then CSIS director Ward Elcock publicly dismissed the probe as, in effect, crap. A senior CSIS officer ordered all copies of the report destroyed. A surviving copy of the report made its way to me and subsequently onto The Globe’s front page.
Here is where my reporting and much of the recent reporting about Chinese influence differ. Sidewinder included the names of a slew of well-known companies, organizations and high-profile figures that the RCMP and CSIS believed had been compromised by the PRC. At the time, my editors and I agreed that it would be irresponsible to publish their identities when relying solely on a 23-page report, even if it was marked top secret.
Here is the other reason I have agreed to appear. A kind of witch hunt-like hysteria is being ginned up by scoop-thirsty journalists and what is likely a handful of members of Canada’s vast and largely unaccountable security intelligence structure. It’s dangerous. People’s reputations and livelihoods have been damaged. Loyal Canadians of Chinese descent, including one of your colleagues, are being tarred as disloyal to the maple leaf.
The special rapporteur found that Global TV’s egregious allegation about Mr. Han Dong was categorically false, but Mr. Dong, unfortunately, is not alone. CSIS officers have even accused veteran police officers, who have risked their lives to protect the communities and the country they have served honourably for decades, of being compromised by the PRC. It is shameful, and this and every other committee examining this matter are duty-bound by decency and fairness to finally hold CSIS officers to account for smearing Canadians because of their phantom ties to China.
I have provided this committee with a copy of a just-published 1,800-word column I wrote that exposes the horror that two brave police officers and proud Canadians have had to endure at the inept hands of CSIS for the past three years. I urge you to read it. If you do, you will understand the deep damage CSIS has done to Paul McNamara, an ex-Vancouver police undercover officer, and Peter Merrifield, a serving RCMP officer, and their families. It smacks of guilt by association that makes the innocent appear guilty.
What happened to Paul McNamara and Peter Merrifield is evidence that, first, as a Federal Court judge ruled in 2020, CSIS has “a degree of institutional disregard for—or, at the very least, a cavalier institutional approach to—the duty of candour and, regrettably, the rule of law.” In other words, CSIS lies and breaks the law. Second, in February of this year, NSIRA issued a report that found that CSIS fails to consider the damage it routinely does to the lives of the Canadians it targets and their families.
That’s why I am urging this committee and every other committee examining this matter to invite Mr. McNamara and Mr. Merrifield to be witnesses, so they can tell you directly about the profound human consequences when CSIS gets it so wrong. If you won’t listen to me, then listen to these two wronged police officers, who deserve to be heard.
Thank you.
:
Thank you, Mr. Mitrovica.
Thank you, all, for your opening statements.
We are going to go to our questioning now, our six-minute round. For the benefit of the witnesses, members of the committee have a finite amount of time and lots of questions to be asked about this issue, so if you can keep your answers succinct, we can get more questions and more answers in. If they do cut you off, it's not that they're rude; they're just aware of that time.
Mr. Barrett, you have six minutes. Go ahead, please.
:
I didn't discredit his reporting; his reporting discredited itself.
I'm also astonished to hear a panellist and a Conservative member of Parliament actually suggest that the former governor general has somehow been compromised by the PRC. This is the kind of hysteria that I alluded to in my statement that is so dangerous to the reputations of loyal Canadians who have worked to serve their communities and this country. It is disgraceful. I hope that reasonable members of Parliament on this committee don't accept but reject outright those kinds of slimy allegations against loyal Canadians.
I have written about and cautioned and warned members of not only this committee but also other committees and Canadians more generally to really reject these kinds of insinuations, which began in 2010 with Richard Fadden and the speech he gave at the time, which was discredited, ironically, by The Globe and Mail, which called his remarks foolish and reckless, and he had to walk back on them later on.
I'm just astonished that a Conservative member of Parliament would infer that the former governor general of Canada is somehow compromised by the PRC. This is the ugliness. This stuff is the gutter. It really is the gutter.
:
This is an absolutely crucial point that I have made before other committees. Hopefully, it will register with this committee, as well.
Intelligence officers produce information. That information can be embellished or edited. Oftentimes—and this is something Mr. Johnston found in his report—it is not corroborated and can be twisted to create a narrative that leads to the kinds of statements the other panellists made about Chinese influence posing an existential threat to Canadian democracy. This is the kind of hyperbole that reasonable, serious people reject.
Let me give you an example of what I'm saying. This might be of interest to the Conservative members of Parliament, who have not asked me one question about any of these matters in the three appearances I've made before PROC and this committee.
During his tenure as Prime Minister, Stephen Harper visited China three times. He negotiated FIPA, the largest bilateral trade deal since NAFTA, which was a trilateral trade deal. He also negotiated a customs intelligence exchange program with China. Now, if I were a conspiracy theory CSIS officer or a writer for the other panellists, I could connect those dots and create a narrative that Mr. Harper was somehow compromised by the PRC. Of course, that is an outrageous allegation. Even though I don't agree with and have written critically about Mr. Harper, I have respect for the commitment he has made to this country.
This is how information can be distorted to create a narrative. It is not evidence. It is not tested. This is the problem that has occurred with the media. They're taking bits of information that have been leaked to them out of context. Mr. Johnston makes, I think, a reasonable point. Unlike the other panellists, he's a serious man who is approaching the subject matter seriously. He made the point that these media reports are based on questionable information and the information has been taken out of context.
Let me go back to—
:
I thank all the witnesses for being here today.
Mr. Baxendale, you've said repeatedly that, for 30 years now, heads of state have been compromised, tainted or, at least, influenced by some countries.
This morning, we're talking about China. That brings to mind the military co-operation program between Canada and China in 2013 and the trade reciprocity agreement in 2014. However, you have already referred to what we call the Canada-China memorandums of understanding, or MOUs.
Could you tell us more?
:
Thank you very much, and thank you to the witnesses who are present here today.
Like you, Professor Juneau, I am also interested in finding some solutions. I know you've provided that to other committees. I'm hopeful we can get back to that space as a committee, to provide recommendations to prevent any type of future instances like this occurring.
Professor Juneau, you stated that after the 2016 U.S. election, there was a fear that Canada needed to take the issue of foreign interference more seriously. Do you believe Canada has adequately prioritized addressing foreign interference since then?
:
That's a good question. I think that a number of steps.... I'm going to sound like a broken record, but there should be more transparency on the part of the government at the political level but also at the bureaucratic level to better communicate with Canadians about what the nature of the threat is and what is being done to mitigate that threat.
When the information comes from the political level, there is of course always an issue of trust; it will be perceived—often rightly—by many Canadians as being politicized. That is part of the challenge. That is why some of the information has to come from the bureaucratic side, but when that happens, the challenge is that it can be perceived by some as interference, for lack of a better word, in an electoral campaign by security services, which is not something that is ideal, either.
That being said, I think that right now the debate on these issues is very polarized by the dissension we're seeing today, where on the one hand some people make exaggerated statements about the survival of Canada's democracy being at stake, which I don't think is the case. On the other side, you have other statements whereby the threat of foreign interference is dismissed, which I think underestimates the threat.
There is a need on the part of government officials to be much more transparent and provide a balanced view, saying yes, there's a problem, and it's a real problem, but being as accurate and balanced as possible.
That concludes our first round. The second round is going to start. We'll get five, five, two and a half and two and a half minutes.
We're going to start with Mr. Barrett, I understand.
[Translation]
Then it'll be Mr. Gourde's turn.
[English]
Mr. Barrett, you have five minutes between the two of you. Go ahead.
Mr. Mitrovica talked about gutter comments, with which he's very well acquainted. He's written columns filled with disgusting anti-Semitic tropes. He's written columns including lies about Jews murdering Christian children in Europe, and he's compared the men and women who served in the IDF to being members of the Mob.
I certainly didn't add him to the witness list today. I have no lessons to take from him, and I have no questions for him.
I'll return the time to Mr. Gourde, please. Thanks.
My question is for all the witnesses.
A number of witnesses, including those here this morning, acknowledge that there's been political interference for at least 30 years. In this particular case, that interference took place during an election period, when Parliament was in a position of weakness. Once the writ drops, fewer services are available to members. They become candidates again, so there's very little that they can do anymore. In addition, ministers have limited responsibilities and powers.
Canada was, then, in a position of weakness for 35, 40 or 45 days. Unfortunately, I think that foreign actors engaged in interference were well aware of that context and really took advantage of it. The Canada Elections Act exists to protect Canadians from irregular activities carried out by other Canadians in connection with an election, but not necessarily from irregular activities carried out by foreign actors targeting Canada.
In addition to all the existing weaknesses, there isn't necessarily a mechanism to allow Elections Canada to halt an election, even if it finds out that there has been political interference, be it generally or partially, in ridings when evidence exists that such activities took place. Often, in a short time frame, it's impossible to prove there's interference. Those investigations take time. In that short 35- to 40‑day window, even if some people believe that there's interference, they're unable to prove it. Elections Canada must then let the process continue.
In your opinion, what mechanisms could we put in place to ensure fair and impartial elections when foreign interference seems almost certain?
You may respond first, Mr. Juneau.
:
Thank you for raising this very important issue in committee.
The first thing I want to say about this is that I have confidence in the reports by Mr. Judd and Mr. Rosenberg on the work done during the most recent elections. In spite of the real threat that existed, there's no reason to believe that the overall integrity of the elections was in jeopardy. Nevertheless, we must bear that in mind.
What can be done to address the real problems that arise during an election campaign, when it's very difficult for politicians to intervene? As I was saying to Mr. Green in answer to a previous question, we want to avoid having politicians respond publicly during an election campaign to those kinds of situations, because it would obviously be seen as partisan, and no doubt rightly so. It's a very uncomfortable situation. At the same time, the public service is also very uncomfortable having to intervene publicly during an election campaign, but I think that must nonetheless be the remedy.
Some work needs to be done regarding the threshold. When it comes to interference, what is the threshold at which the panel of deputy ministers, the director of CSIS and others must publicly intervene? Perhaps that threshold is a bit too high. It should be lowered, but not too much. Otherwise, there will be too many public statements coming from the panel.
To repeat somewhat what I said earlier, I think the public needs to better understand how the system works and why things are done the way they are. That can only be done though active communication with the public, and that has to include the members. They're not well enough informed, at present. They're not getting enough information from the intelligence services to be able to act as spokespeople. Consequently, they need to be better informed.
Thank you to our witnesses for joining us today for this very important study.
Monsieur Juneau, when you appeared before PROC, you identified challenges in recruitment and retention for Canada's security agencies. I believe you mentioned it towards the end there with regard to one of my colleague's questions. We also heard from other witnesses before, in previous testimony, that CSIS does a poor job of recruiting, and recruiting diverse people from diverse diasporas within Canada.
What do you believe are the root causes of these challenges? Is there a culture factor that we need to consider? We heard about racism and things like that, which you also mentioned.
:
Thank you for your question.
Just as a preamble, if you are interested in that, I would recommend two sources that are especially interesting and that go very much in depth on these issues. NSICOP's annual report—I think it might be 2019, but it may not be that year—has a full chapter on diversity in the intelligence community. It is very well done. It is one of the best things I've read on that issue from any source—academic, government or otherwise. The second source is the national security transparency advisory group, which I used to co-chair. I mentioned them in my remarks. Our third annual report, published just about a year ago now, focused very much on engagement by the intelligence community with minority communities in Canada to tackle very much in detail the issue you raised.
I want to emphasize that debates on diversity in the intelligence and national security community have become very politicized, like a lot of other debates, and are often viewed in these terms. I understand why that's the case, but diversity in the intelligence community, and for that matter in the armed forces, has to be viewed in operational and pragmatic terms whereby it's an operational necessity. When these services are not diverse, they shoot themselves in the foot. They close off large sectors of the population from recruitment. They are not able to achieve certain functions, whether it's civil-military relations on the military side, gaining information and recruiting human sources in certain communities on the intelligence side, and so on. It is mission-critical for these organizations to be diverse.
I think they are doing a much better job at CSIS, the RCMP and the CBSA now than they were 10 or 20 years ago, when the situation was abysmal, but there's still a lot of progress to make. That progress is unequal. CSE is ahead, I think, of several others. The RCMP and the CBSA have more catching up to do.
How do you improve that? It's engagement, engagement, engagement: They need to go out there with effective engagement units that are able to reach out to Chinese Canadian, Iranian Canadian, Indian Canadian and Saudi Canadian communities to build trust and open channels of communication. That's not only to get information on threats and communicate information on how to mitigate those threats but also, by building that trust and building that brand, to be able to better recruit.
All these things are connected.
:
Thank you very much for your question. That's one of the things I'm most interested in.
One of the big problems we have in Canada is that collective national security literacy is low. In a sense, that's good. If you think about it, it's the result of our very secure geographical location, which is a luxury. However, Canada is increasingly facing threats, ranging from Chinese or other foreign interference to cybersecurity and economic espionage. We have some catching up to do to address these threats. This low literacy puts on the brakes and makes public debate more difficult. As a result, we don't feel enough political pressure to take action.
We could do a lot to improve the situation. First of all, we need to be much more transparent, which goes back to everything I've said so far. Canada also needs to do a better job of communicating with the media. I really want to emphasize that point. Politically and bureaucratically, the government must share quality information, not just in quantity, with local and national media, which it does very poorly.
:
We are resuming our meeting with our second panel.
I would like to welcome our witnesses for the second hour today. As individuals, we have Dr. Dyane Adam, former vice-chair of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation board of directors; Dr. Ginger Gibson, director of The Firelight Group; and Madeleine Redfern.
Dr. Gibson, I see, is on Zoom.
Dr. Adam, the floor is yours for a five-minute opening statement. Please go ahead. Thank you.
Returning to testify before a parliamentary committee takes me back to some very good times I had on Parliament Hill, not as a member of Parliament, like you, but as an officer of Parliament, specifically as the Commissioner of Official Languages, a position I held from 1999 to 2006.
This morning, I will spend the few minutes you've given me to present a brief history of my journey with the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation. I have had ties with the foundation since 2008, when I was appointed as a mentor to two doctoral candidates who are now full professors at Quebec universities.
I then continued my involvement in the foundation's alumni network. I was vice-president of the network until 2015. The Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation then asked me to sit on the selection committee for the president and CEO in 2018. That committee was chaired by the chair of the board of directors at the time, John McCall MacBain. Pascale Fournier, who I believe you've already met, is the candidate the committee selected.
I subsequently had the privilege of sitting on the advisory committee on the review of the strategic plan, which was led by Dr. Fournier. The result of this exercise, which was colossal, I must say, spread across the country. It really set the foundation's programs and operations on a completely new path focused on servant leadership, inclusion and diversity.
In May 2020, the chair of the board of directors at the time, Patrick Pichette, invited me to join the board of directors. I was appointed vice-chair of the board of directors in March 2021 and a member of the foundation's executive committee. At that time, I also sat on the strategic advisory committee charged with selecting the scientific cycles for the 2021 cohort, the “Language, Culture and Identity” cycle; for the 2022 cohort, the “Global Economies” cycle; and, more recently, for the 2023 cohort, the “Canada in the World: The Future of Foreign Policy” cycle.
I was also appointed to the governance committee responsible for policy and good governance. In addition, I sat on the mentor and fellow selection committee for 2022 and 2023.
That was an overview of my involvement with the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation over the past 15 years.
In closing, I'd like to say that I fully support the mission and values of the foundation, particularly since the program review and management policies developed under Pascale Fournier's outstanding leadership.
I regret that a governance crisis has precipitated her and the chief financial officer's resignation, as well as my own resignation from the board of directors and that of seven other colleagues and board members. However, I remain a member of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation because of my status as a former mentor.
Thank you for your time. To the best of my ability, I'm prepared to answer any questions you may have on the subject your committee is currently studying.
I'm coming to you this morning from Treaty 6 territory.
My name is Dr. Ginger Gibson. As my colleague just did, I want to give you some context of who I am.
I was very fortunate to be a scholar in 2003. I was selected by the Trudeau Foundation as a scholar to complete my Ph.D. research. I completed that and then years later, I became a director. It was requested that I become a director and a board member. I served on the Trudeau Foundation as a board member and a director for three years.
I apologize for not being there in person today. I had a loss in the family this week. With existing commitments and that loss, it was impossible for me to travel. I mean no disrespect. I'm very grateful to have been called and I'm eager for your questions.
I hold the Trudeau Foundation in the highest respect. I served on two of the student selection committees for the past two years. In 2022 and 2021, I was on the panel that selected the scholars who would be studying and receiving scholarships for those years.
During my time at the foundation—for all the years I was there, from 2020 to 2023—I worked alongside the other directors and I observed the work of Dr. Fournier, whom you've seen. I hold her in the highest respect. Her work was—
I did serve on those two panels and selected scholars from across Canada and elsewhere. The foundation is quite remarkable. The work of the foundation is amazing.
I want to comment on the leadership of Dr. Fournier, who led the foundation as president and brought in a scientific cycle that was unique. It allowed us to bring forward and celebrate Ph.D. students from across Canada and worldwide who are going to serve this country. All of the people who were selected in my cohort are now leaders across the country, and I expect the same of the scholars who are being selected now.
I saw no concerns in governance or leadership while Dr. Fournier was serving. I do consider there has been some effort to create some sense that she was not leading well. This was not the case in my experience. I left the foundation at the same time as Dyane Adam and the other seven colleagues who were involved. I was also involved in attempting to bring a motion forward to have conflict of interest declared of directors. When I found there was no path through, and a governance tangle and entanglement, I resigned.
That's the end of my statement.
Thank you very much. I look forward to your questions.
:
Good morning. My name is Madeleine Redfern. I am an Inuk from the South Baffin region of Nunavut.
My work, past and present, is quite varied, stemming from business, law, politics and non-governmental organizations at the national, regional and local level. That includes the Indspire board, the Canadian Alliance to End Homelessness, previously on the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation, the Canadian Arctic Innovation Association, Inuit Business Council and more.
Canada's national security matters. Our democratic institutions matter. My journey into security issues truly began when I was the mayor of Iqaluit. I did two terms for Nunavut's capital city. While I was mayor, I was confronted with a lot of security issues, on a municipal, territorial and national level. Security is a multi-layered issue in Canada's Arctic. For us northerners, security issues are not just military or even just democracy. We have military infrastructure such as the forward operating location and military personnel in our communities.
In my first year as mayor, Telesat's satellite went down. Iqaluit and the entire northern part of Canada—from Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut to the northern parts of the provinces of British Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec—had no telecommunications services. No one could call in. No one could call out. The Internet was down. You couldn't pay for your groceries or gas. You couldn't go to the bank; you couldn't get money from the ATMs. Planes were grounded, except for a few, which had to fly, of course, due to medical reasons.
Weeks prior to that, I read a report that stated that Canada's northern telecommunications system was at risk and that the situation was so dire it was deemed critical. Thankfully, Anik F2 was able to be brought back online within 22 hours. However, it heightened how vulnerable we are in the north when it comes to telecommunications.
In our communities, we are also dealing with energy insecurity. Several of our power generators are well past their 40-year operating life. As mayor, my community faced regular power outages. Power prices increased by 30% in those two years of my first term. The generators in some of our Nunavut communities have failed or been completely lost due to fire in the dead of winter, when temperatures can go down to -50°C. This happened to Pangnirtung, when it burned down to the ground in the spring—by your standards, still winter.
In Nunavut, we are dealing with over 80% of our water infrastructure in poor to bad condition. Our communities cannot build the much-needed housing or other buildings until the water systems are fixed or replaced.
My first water crisis happened in the first year of my term, when the water main broke in February. The city's senior administrative officer and the director of public works knocked on my door at 4 a.m. to inform me that, despite best efforts, for many hours, our staff and contractors had been struggling to fix the broken pipe. They were standing in rushing waste water in extremely cold temperatures, trying desperately to fix the pipe to save our precious water. We rely on a small nearby lake for our water reservoir, and the water we have in that lake in November has to last for the entire winter and spring.
Iqaluit is now in its sixth year of a local state of emergency because of the lack of adequate water. We're watching and living the collapse of our existing water infrastructure with continuous pipe breakages. Only two years ago, the city also faced an additional local state of emergency when our water was contaminated by fuel and the military was called in to assist.
Our northern leaders must deal with security issues from the local level to the national level. That's part of the work we do. You learn quickly to adopt a security mindset. I established a pretty good relationship with the police force, the Canadian Rangers and the military, including Joint Task Force North. I had to scale up my knowledge on disaster risk prevention and response.
Most of our vulnerabilities and security threats come from inadequate government policies and the lack of appropriate investment in our communities' infrastructure. What I also learned is that the type of infrastructure we need is the same as what is needed in the mines and by our military: telecommunications, energy and transportation.
I have made it my life's work to work on the intersection of sustainable development and security in the Arctic region and to understand the transformative potential of new technologies. Unfortunately, too often, government policies, programs and investment decisions for decades have contributed to our very real vulnerabilities, not just with respect to infrastructure but also our economic vulnerabilities.
As mayor, I was offered free trips to China. I saw other Canadian leaders, business people, indigenous and municipal leaders, take those free trips. I'm concerned about their independence and the implications of foreign investment, especially in critical infrastructure and critical mines.
There remains fundamental risk to Canada's Arctic security due to government policies, funding programs and inadequate investments, often made by transient or distant bureaucracy, that put our national security at risk even at the local level.
We must do better. We need Canada to invest and seek to develop an Arctic strategy that attracts Canadian private sector and pension funds investment to redirect the billions of dollars that are invested in China into our north. We are a good investment.
:
First of all, I can speak for myself. I think that's the best. We were online, which makes it difficult to see the reactions, as you know. I remember that, first of all, I had questions as to why Mr. Trudeau signed that particular donation, because normally—according to the policy—it would have been the CFO who should have done that.
Let's say it was too close for comfort, in the sense that already we had the name of Trudeau in our foundation, even though it's public funds, even though this foundation is not partisan. As you know, our current is the son of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, and so is Alexandre. In a context like that, I felt that we were in a situation where we had to mitigate the risk, because it's not the best position to be in for a foundation to be perceived as having issues like links to politics or the government.
I personally felt uncomfortable with that.
:
I can only say what I was told, and talk about a couple of discussions I had with Ms. Lin, the CFO.
[Translation]
I'm going to speak French, because it's a little easier and more natural for me.
I know that Ms. Lin and Pascale Fournier were trying to recreate the sequence of events by looking at past records and going back to the conversations in emails about that donation. These are staff members who are no longer employed by the foundation.
So they did an exploratory search to find out what the communications were. As vice-chair, I was informed that there were messages or emails indicating that there had been directives from a Chinese entity. They more or less dictated to whom the receipts for the donation should be issued.
I'd also like to thank our witnesses.
Like you, Mr. Chair, I'd like to express our condolences to Dr. Gibson for the loss her family has suffered.
Before I begin my questions, I'd like to ask you something. I saw that Dr. Redfern's speech was several pages long, and she didn't have enough time to finish it.
Could I invite her to submit her document to the clerk so that we can take full advantage of all her comments?
I don't know if it's a culture. Personally, all the positions I've held have been in public organizations subject to the Access to Information Act. We were used to dealing with that. What's more, as academics, we like writing. We like to document our decisions so that they can be consulted, and we like research.
As I've told the chair of the board of directors on a number of occasions, I would sometimes have liked to have briefing notes to document the risks. Let's just say that the board was less inclined to produce such notes, except for programs and all that. For hotter issues, I would have liked to have had more complete notes on the balance of risks. It wasn't our practice to do this for hot issues. I'm not talking about programs.
:
Sure. Thank you very much.
Similarly to what Madeleine Redfern said, during the governance crisis, there was no clear path through. There was a very confused and heated meeting that we never received minutes from. The meeting was extremely long. It was a four-hour meeting. After that meeting, when we had asked the directors who were in a conflict of interest to recuse themselves and we thought we had a clear path through, there was a flood of emails, and those emails came from a group of people, a number of people who, at every turn, struck down the path forward.
There was a suggestion that a lawyer be retained to advise. That was agreed to, but then the lawyer's background was called into question. Then there was a suggestion that the folks who had been involved in the years in question recuse themselves. There was a flurry of emails about that. Then there were in-depth edits to motions I had put forward.
All of this was a very heavy effort in the context of virtual communication. There was a boxing in of movement forward, and no clear path for all of the directors to move collectively through. Draft motions asking people to recuse themselves were struck down. We tried to run those motions through a good process, but at each turn, as I said, these motions were struck down. At no point in the process did the directors from the years in question register a conflict of interest or move away from the decision-making process.
Two and a half minutes isn't very long.
I'll recap. There are very different versions provided by Mr. Rosenberg, Mr. Johnson and Mr. Trudeau. They are completely at odds with those of Dr. Fournier, Ms. Redfern, Dr. Adam and Dr. Gibson.
We heard some facts that had been disclosed rather covertly by witnesses, namely Mr. Johnson, Mr. Trudeau and Mr. Rosenberg. We saw this morning that not everything was written down as we would have liked. There was some lack of governance when it was needed. It didn't seem to be a problem before. Pascale Fournier told us that she had been intimidated during the resolution of this conflict. Some members didn't want to recuse themselves from a potential conflict of interest or at least the appearance of one. I'm being very cautious.
We heard about foundation fellows who recently received an email stating that everything was fine, that nothing had happened and that nothing had changed.
The version of Mr. Rosenberg, Mr. Johnson and Mr. Trudeau says that everything is fine, while the version of former members of the board of directors and of the former president and CEO, Dr. Fournier, says the opposite.
Would you like to comment on that, Dr. Adam, Ms. Redfern and Dr. Gibson?
We only have a minute and a half.
I have a quick question for all three of you. Give a very quick response, if you don't mind.
Madame Fournier appeared before this committee. I found her testimony compelling and credible. There were some witnesses who came afterwards who were less than favourable in their review of Ms. Fournier's performance as the executive director of the Trudeau Foundation.
[Translation]
I'll start with you, Dr. Adam.
[English]
How would you describe Madame Fournier's performance as the executive director of the Trudeau Foundation, in about 30 seconds or less?
Thank you to all our witnesses for being here today.
Thank you to our technicians, our analysts and our clerk.
I am going to conclude this meeting.
To our witnesses, on behalf of the committee and on behalf of Canadians, I want to thank you for being here.
Again, Dr. Gibson, you have our sincere condolences.
Thank you. The meeting is adjourned.