Archive for the ‘Liberals’ Category

Liberals behind alleged byelection bribe: OPP 0

TORONTO-

Ontario Liberals illegally tried to lure Sudbury byelection candidate Andrew Olivier into dropping out of a nomination race with an offer of a job or appointment, an OPP document says.

The explosive allegation of criminal wrongdoing is contained in court documents filed by Det.-Const. Erin Thomas, of the OPP Anti-Rackets Squad, and obtained by the Toronto Sun Thursday the same day that Sudbury byelection voters headed to the polls.

In the information to obtain a production order, which has not been proven in court, Thomas said there are reasonable grounds to believe that a Criminal Code offence was committed the solicitation, negotiation in any manner or recommendation with respect to an appointment to an office in expectation of a direct or indirect reward, advantage or benefit.

No charges have been laid.

Olivier has publicly released recordings of conversations he had with Sudbury Liberal organizer Gerry Lougheed Jr. and Liberal campaign director Pat Sorbara, the premiers deputy chief of staff, which he claims are proof that they offered him a job or appointment to step aside for preferred candidate Glenn Thibeault.

Sorbara explained to Olivier the premier is desperate to win back the Sudbury seat in the legislature, says the document, which seeks full recordings of Oliviers conversations.

I do believe that Gerry Lougheed and Patricia Sorbara both engaged in soliciting and negotiating with Andrew Olivier in their respective conversations, Thomas said. I believe the words spoken by both Lougheed and Sorbara to Olivier assists me in my belief the Criminal Code offence has been committed.

Olivier also spoke to Premier Kathleen Wynne but that chat was apparently not recorded.

OPP investigators were told by Olivier that the premier made it clear that while she had nothing against him personally, she wanted Thibeault to gain the Liberal nomination.

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Liberals behind alleged byelection bribe: OPP 0

Liberals win Sudbury by-election despite allegation party broke the law with job offer

Police believe two Liberal operatives, including one of Premier Kathleen Wynnes top aides, broke the law by offering a former candidate a government job in exchange for dropping out of the Sudbury by-election race.

The revelation, in a court document obtained by The Globe and Mail on election day, capped a dramatic campaign that included everything from a high-profile party defection to tape-recorded conversations that are now at the centre of a criminal probe.

Despite the scandal, the Liberals pulled off a win. Liberal Glenn Thibeault, who defected from the federal New Democrats to run for the provincial Liberals, beat out NDP candidate Suzanne Shawbonquit by over 1,000 votes.

Shortly before 11 p.m., Ms. Wynne and Mr. Thibeault took the stage in a hotel atrium to the strains of AC/DC's Thunderstruck.

"There was a lot of negativity in this campaign, and you saw through that," she told hundreds of cheering Liberal faithful. "With your optimism, you saw the positivity. You ran a terrific campaign."

But it was Independent candidate Andrew Olivier who placed a distant third who was at the heart of the by-election drama, which will hang over the party even after the ballots are counted.

The Ontario Provincial Police investigation turns on conversations Mr. Olivier had last December with Patricia Sorbara, Ms. Wynnes deputy chief of staff, and Liberal fundraiser Gerry Lougheed.

At the time, Mr. Olivier was seeking the Liberal nomination. But Ms. Wynne instead wanted then-federal MPP Mr. Thibeault to get the nomination unopposed. Both Ms. Sorbara and Mr. Lougheed tried to persuade Mr. Olivier to drop out.

Mr. Olivier, who is quadriplegic and records conversations in lieu of taking notes, made tapes of his discussions. In those recordings, Ms. Sorbara and Mr. Lougheed dangled possible job options for Mr. Olivier. Ms. Sorbara cited posts as a constituency assistant, or an appointment to a government commission studying accessibility issues.

In an information to obtain, a police document sworn before a judge to get a production order for originals of Mr. Oliviers tapes, police allege Ms. Sorbara and Mr. Lougheed broke federal corruption laws by negotiating appointments, citing section 125 of the Criminal Code.

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Liberals win Sudbury by-election despite allegation party broke the law with job offer

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Liberals to support anti-terrorism bill

Libreal Leader Justin Trudeau asksa question during question period in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

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By Joan Bryden, The Canadian Press

OTTAWA - Justin Trudeau's Liberals will vote in favour of the government's new anti-terrorism bill, despite concerns that it provides no mechanisms to guard against abuse of the new powers it would give security agencies.

If the Conservative government refuses to amend the bill to address those concerns, Trudeau says Liberals will still support it but will fix the flaws should they win the coming election.

"The current government can accept that Canadians want greater oversight and accountability, or it will give us the opportunity to offer that directly to Canadians in the upcoming election campaign," the Liberal leader said Wednesday.

Liberals want the bill amended to provide for parliamentary oversight of security agencies and a mechanism to require mandatory review of the legislation in the years to come.

The bill would give the Canadian Security Intelligence Service more power to thwart suspected terrorists' travel plans, disrupt bank transactions and covertly interfere with radical websites.

It would also make it easier for the RCMP to obtain a peace bond to restrict the movements of suspects and extend the amount of time they can be kept in preventative arrest and detention.

And it would create a new criminal offence: encouraging someone to carry out a terrorist attack.

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Liberals to support anti-terrorism bill

Federal Liberals back terror bill but seek changes

OTTAWA Justin Trudeaus Liberals will vote in favour of the governments new anti-terrorism bill, despite concerns that it provides no mechanisms to guard against abuse of the new powers it would give security agencies.

If the Conservative government refuses to amend the bill to address those concerns, Trudeau says Liberals will still support it but will fix the flaws should they win the coming election.

The current government can accept that Canadians want greater oversight and accountability, or it will give us the opportunity to offer that directly to Canadians in the upcoming election campaign, the Liberal leader said Wednesday.

Liberals want the bill amended to provide for parliamentary oversight of security agencies and a mechanism to require mandatory review of the legislation in the years to come.

The bill would give the Canadian Security Intelligence Service more power to thwart suspected terrorists travel plans, disrupt bank transactions and covertly interfere with radical websites.

It would also make it easier for the RCMP to obtain a peace bond to restrict the movements of suspects and extend the amount of time they can be kept in preventative arrest and detention.

And it would create a new criminal offence: encouraging someone to carry out a terrorist attack.

Trudeau said Liberals welcome measures to build on the powers of preventative arrest, expand the no-fly regime and enhance co-ordinated information sharing among government departments and agencies.

But he added: I believe that when a government asks its citizens to give up even a small portion of their liberty, it is that governments highest responsibility to guarantee that its new powers will not be abused.

It is not enough for a government to say simply, Trust us. That trust must be earned. It must be checked and it must be renewed.

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Federal Liberals back terror bill but seek changes