Liberal-dominated justice committee ends SNC-Lavalin probe amid opposition howls
OTTAWA — The Liberal-dominated justice committee of the House of Commons pulled the plug Tuesday on its probe of the SNC-Lavalin affair, prompting fresh howls of opposition outrage and a walkout by Conservative MPs from the government’s budget presentation later in the day.
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer accused Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of “thumbing his nose” at Canadians. New Democrat Leader Jagmeet Singh pushed for a public inquiry. The Conservatives compared the Liberals to the rights-abusing regimes in Venezuela and Russia, which Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland called insulting.
Trudeau accused the Conservatives of trying to avoid talking about the budget and their own “failed” approach to the economy — one he said is rooted in the 10 years of Tory government under Stephen Harper.
The real fireworks blew up when Finance Minister Bill Morneau prepared to unveil the Liberals’ pre-election budget later in the day. The Conservatives forced a vote on a motion to allow MPs on the fisheries committee to travel, on which a number of Tory MPs voted both for and against. They then rose, one by one, afterwards for apologize for voting twice, each managing to work in a denunciation of the Liberals’ refusal to recall former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to the committee. “Let her speak” was the refrain.