Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino’s department censored “hundreds” of pages of documents related to security measures taken against the Freedom Convoy in February, according to Bloc Québécois MP Rhéal Fortin.
Public Safety provided the documents to the Special Joint Committee on the Declaration of Emergency after being ordered to do so by the committee in May. Fortin told the committee on Oct. 6 that it “needs to address” why large portions of the Public Safety documents have been censored.
“You have these entire pages with massive redactions. [We’re] talking about hundreds of pages of redacted documents,” Fortin said, as first reported by Blacklock’s Reporter.
“What do we do with this?” said Fortin. “I don’t know what is hidden here. I don’t know why this information is hidden.”
“We are entitled to an answer as to why these things are blacked out,” he said.
‘Hampering’ Committee Work
Liberal MP Rachel Bendayan said she doesn’t see why it would be helpful to have a Public Safety representative appear before the committee to explain the redactions, saying the person wouldn’t be able to provide detailed information.“Whoever will testify will not be in a position to tell us substantively what supports that redaction,” she said. “We'll still be here in 2026 If we keep focusing on this issue.”
Senator Claude Carignan argued the redacted documents are hindering the committee from carrying out a thorough investigation.
“We just can’t wait until the end of our hearings to then get an explanation and see if there’s some way to clean things up or open up more information than what we have received,” said Carignan.
“As an example, I use these documents to ask the witnesses questions,” he added. “There might be areas that are blacked out that I could use, but I can’t wait until the very end [when] the witnesses have all left.”
Carignan added that the redactions are “really hampering us in our work.”
The public inquiry into the federal government’s use of the Emergencies Act will begin on Oct. 13 and run throughout November, with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, key Freedom Convoy organizers, and prominent cabinet members expected to testify.