Burton: Trudeau’s exit --- A turning point for Canada’s stance on China and foreign interference
Last June, after much foot-dragging, Bill C-70 — which sets the framework for a Foreign Influence Transparency Registry — was finally enacted. Today, seven months later, the government website still notes, “The coming into force date of the Foreign Influence Transparency and Accountability Act (FITAA), which creates the Foreign Influence Transparency Registry, will be set by the Governor-in-Council in the coming months.” Those months presumably will not be coming while Justin Trudeau remains a lame-duck prime minister.
But what should be most alarming to Canadians was the government’s refusal to respond to the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians’ revelation, also last June, that 11 members of Parliament “have wittingly or unwittingly colluded with foreign governments.”
Rather than making sure the 11 are made accountable before they ask voters to support them in another election, the government instead refuses to let Canadians know the identity of these possibly compromised parliamentarians, saying — incredibly — that such revelations would threaten national security.
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