Opposition MPs have raised questions about a meeting in April 2016 between the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation and senior government officials in the building that houses the Prime Minister’s Office. It turns out the foundation had two more such meetings in the building, according to records seen by The Epoch Times.
All three meetings pertained to the foundation discussing its “Pluralism Project,” aimed at proving the economic benefits of diversity and inclusion with senior government officials.
Since becoming Liberal Party leader in 2013, Trudeau has denied any links to the foundation set up in the name of his father.
But MPs from every opposition party have suggested that the foundation benefited from privileged access to Langevin Block, which sits across from Parliament Hill. Trudeau renamed the building Office of the Prime Minister and Privy Council in 2017 because its original namesake, Hector Langevin, one of the fathers of Confederation, had a role in the residential school system.
“It was actually quite surprising to see that the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation was in the Prime Minister’s building with access to five deputy ministers. That is not a common occurrence,” said Bloc Québécois MP René Villemure during Rosenberg’s testimony.
“It may not be a common occurrence, but the Langevin Building is located in downtown Ottawa, so it is very central and it is a place where senior officials often meet,” said Rosenberg, a former senior public servant who worked at the Privy Council Office (PCO), the prime minister’s department.
The agenda for the April 2016 meeting noted the participation of nine senior government officials, including two deputy ministers, two assistant deputy ministers, and three deputy secretaries to the cabinet.
Conservative MP Garnett Genuis noted that holding meetings inside the building that houses the PMO “sends a message.”
“If you want to send a message that this foundation is closely connected to the Prime Minister and therefore donations to this foundation are appreciated by the Prime Minister, a great way to send that message is to have it in the relatively small building that is called ‘the Prime Minister’s Office,’” he said.
Rosenberg said that he “fundamentally” disagreed with that view. “I don’t think it sends any message, and we were not the only ones to have the opportunity to go there.”
Common Vision
Before the first meeting was held in January 2016, the PCO wrote a meeting note describing the participants and context.“[Name redacted] has requested a meeting with PCO officials to discuss the Pluralism Project, a project sponsored by the Trudeau Foundation which aims to generate a public debate on the social and economic impacts of cultural pluralism in Canada,” it said.
The names of the other participants from the foundation were also redacted, but the description of their role wasn’t, suggesting it involved project leads Bessma Momani from the University of Waterloo and Jillian Stirk from Simon Fraser University.
Participants from the PCO were noted to be Matthew Mendelsohn, deputy secretary to cabinet (with a “to be confirmed” mention), and François Daigle, assistant secretary to cabinet. The secretary to the cabinet is the Clerk of the Privy Council, the top public servant in the federal government.
The PCO said the Pluralism Project coincides with the Liberal government’s priorities, but expressed uncertainty as to whether the foundation was seeking financial support.
“The theme behind the Pluralism Project aligns with the Government’s commitment to diversity and inclusion, and as such, could be of interest to departmental policy work at Canadian Heritage (PCH), Immigration, Citizenship and Refugees (IRCC) and Global Affairs (GAC),” says the meeting note.
The meeting with the deputy ministers followed in April 2016, where they were briefed on the project. The meeting in March 2017 was to inform a group of assistant deputy ministers of the results of the project.
Governance Crisis
The Trudeau Foundation went through a governance crisis after The Globe and Mail report in February, with its CEO and most of the directors on the board resigning over how the Chinese donation would be investigated.One of those directors, Edward Johnson, who remains as chair of the foundation, has denied the existence of such a motion.