Another leak in Canada from its intelligence agency, CSIS, is drawing attention to China’s illegal influence, interference, and intelligence operations in support of the Liberal government in Ottawa.
Predictably, the Liberals are in damage control mode. Why bite the hand that feeds you?
In public comments, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seems more concerned with the identity of the whistleblower who exposed the coverup, than with the crimes of Beijing and its witting Canadian agents. Ottawa has for years self-servingly downplayed and hidden this authoritarian influence from the public.
Nine Liberal and two Conservative MPs, all supported by China, are now making laws in Ottawa and influencing the public from positions of authority.
The alleged crimes include political campaign donations encouraged by China that accrue tax credits for the donors, who then get refunded the balance from the campaign. It’s an outrageous scheme that bilks money from taxpayers, including Conservatives, to support the Liberal Party and those few Conservatives seen as “friends of China.”
China’s sophisticated political strategy in Canada maximizes its influence by seeking a Liberal minority government, meaning the Liberals would need to gain support from at least one other political party to remain in power. This, Beijing apparently reasoned, would keep relatively China-friendly Trudeau in power, but keep him sufficiently off-balance to remain maximally dependent on continued support from the Chinese Communist Party.
But Trudeau here is obfuscating the facts through an over-generalization.
A China diplomat bragging about interfering in the internal affairs of another country is highly irregular, as not interfering is supposedly a point of pride for them and a way to differentiate the Chinese regime from the United States, which frequently supports improved human rights and more democratic governance around the world.
The latest leak demonstrates Beijing’s interference, and Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has been raising further concerns.
Poilievre noted that the leaked CSIS report said China’s communists wanted Trudeau to lead Canada because they knew “Trudeau would work for their interests rather than Canada’s interests, and that’s why he’s covered up this information for so long.”
Unlike Trudeau, Poilievre supports a public registry of foreign agents in Canada, as in the United States and Australia. Some British lawmakers also support such a registry.
Proponents hope registries will decrease foreign political influence and election interference, and improve the integrity and public confidence in election processes and results.
Trudeau is not taking these issues seriously, as he hasn’t even publicly endorsed the idea of a registry, much less developed a plan to close the loopholes found elsewhere. This explains why the documents were leaked in the first place. Trudeau has ignored years of persistent and unaddressed concerns within the intelligence agencies that not enough is being done to stem the tide of China’s influence operations.
This threat persists around the world.
China’s support of liberals can be found in Beijing’s support of U.S. Democrats over Republicans, and the Australian Labor Party over the country’s conservatives.
Beijing consistently supports political parties that it considers the lesser of democratic evils, that scrimp on defence in favour of handouts, play the race card when the threat is from the regime in China not the Chinese people, and leave our allies in Asia dependent and defenceless. In response, liberal parties around the world typically downplay the threat from China.
It’s a win-win relationship that should end immediately through new and tougher political representation.