Trudeau: I Had to Use Martial Law to Suppress Freedom Convoy Because “What If Someone Had Gotten Hurt”?

Seven police officers were injured after BLM riots in Toronto.

A totalitarian clown doesn’t stop being a clown just because he’s also a totalitarian.

As the investigation delves into Trudeau’s illegal decision to ruthlessly suppress the Freedom Convoy protests, the investigation turned up extraordinary coordination and pressure from the Biden administration.

Share

Could the convoy come back?

In late January, as convoys of flag-bedecked tractor-trailers, RVs and pickup trucks streamed toward the capital from practically every corner of Canada, Charles Bordeleau watched with professional interest but not much concern.

As its former chief, Bordeleau knew the Ottawa Police Service (OPS) was deeply experienced — perhaps more experienced than any other law enforcement agency in the country — at managing protests of all shapes and sizes.

As well, police had ample warning about what was heading their way. They could literally watch the western convoy coming from 4,000 kilometres away, and were receiving regular intelligence updates as it approached the city.

Share

After six weeks of Emergencies Act testimony, questions remain about legal advice and redactions

No redactions have evoked as much frustration as the government’s claim of solicitor-client privilege, which it used to hide legal advice it received before invoking the Act

OTTAWA — After six weeks and 76 witnesses, including the prime minister and much of his cabinet, public hearings on the use of the Emergencies Act are done, but some crucial questions remain.

What did the government hide behind document redactions, and what was the key legal advice cabinet leaned on to invoke the act?

Share

Emergencies Act inquiry price tag estimated at nearly $19M

The price tag for the inquiry probing the government’s use of the Emergencies Act hasn’t been finalized yet — but it could be roughly $18.8 million, according to the Privy Council Office (PCO).

A PCO spokesperson told CBC News that while the total won’t be known until the Public Order Emergency Commission completes its work, the federal government approved $18.8 million to cover its costs.

Share

Washington Pressured Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to Shut Down ‘Freedom Convoy’

In January 2022, vaccine exemptions for Canadian and American cross-border truckers ended, leaving about 15,000 Canadian truckers who regularly cross the border in the performance of their jobs suddenly unemployed.

Their response was heartening. Thousands of truckers joined “Freedom Convoys,” shutting down border crossings and finally ending up in the Canadian capital of Ottawa, where they virtually occupied Parliament Hill.

Share

Ivison: A ‘serene’ Justin Trudeau fails to justify using the Emergencies Act

Justin Trudeau’s appearance at the inquiry into the invocation of the Emergencies Act won’t move mountains, or even votes. Those who hold him personally responsible for the decline of Canadian civilization will keep sticking pins in his likeness; those concerned that his government’s response to the Freedom Convoy will normalize the use of emergency powers will still argue that the Liberals overreacted; the two-thirds of the population that believes the declaration of a public order emergency was necessary will remain unconcerned about possible rights and freedoms abuses.

Share

Animosity and distrust smouldered between PM and protesters as Trudeau testified

Convoy den mother Tamara Lich sat where she always does, in the front row of public seating right behind the lawyers stacked three tables deep.

Two seats over was convoy lawyer Keith Wilson. When the trucks rolled into Ottawa last winter, he was the one who introduced Ms. Lich to Canadians at a press conference, describing her as “the spark that lit this fire.”

Share

High Living Governor General Likes Tax Payer Dollars – Tax Payer Protests Not So Much

Indian name means “Put it on the tab”

Governor General Supported Shutting Down Convoy’s Online Crowdfunding: Emergencies Act Inquiry

During a phone call in early February with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Gov. Gen. Mary Simon voiced her support of the online crowdfunding platform GoFundMe shutting down its Freedom Convoy fundraising campaign, which resulted in most of the $10 million donated being refunded to the original senders.

Simon also said she believed the convoy to be funded by “some international money.”

Share

Freedom Convoy lawyer behind ‘false flag’ allegations is served libel notice, then chases someone

OTTAWA – The extraordinary controversy created by one of the lawyers representing some Freedom Convoy organizers at the Emergencies Act inquiry took more strange turns on Thursday.

Lawyer Brendan Miller was served Thursday with a libel notice by Brian Fox, a public relations executive that Miller had accused of parading a Nazi flag at the Freedom Convoy protest in Ottawa, allegedly to discredit the protest.

Share

Rex Murphy: Liberals make a mockery of Canadian democracy

The inquiry into the use of the Emergencies Act is in its sixth week, which, it may be useful to note, is about five times longer than the act itself was in force.

Hold in mind that the act was actually only half-passed. It got through the Singh-Trudeau House of Commons. How could it not, Jagmeet Singh and Justin Trudeau having exchanged the political equivalent of lovers’ vows — in greeting card lingo pledging “to be there for each other” any time scandal or Pierre Poilievre’s troops got close to presenting a real challenge.

Share

Colby Cosh: Jokes about sending tanks into Ottawa elucidate the ruling-class psyche

Among the zaniest nuggets of news to fall out of the Emergencies Act hearings this week was a text-message exchange in which exasperated federal cabinet ministers discussed mobilizing Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) tanks against last winter’s truck convoy protests centred on Ottawa. On Feb. 2, less than a week after the trucks showed up in the capital, Justice Minister David Lametti urged the public safety minister, Marco Mendicino, to act fast.

Share

RCMP wanted Emergencies Act to stay in place for up to three weeks: documents

OTTAWA – The RCMP pushed the government to keep the Emergencies Act in place for up to three weeks after it had been invoked arguing it was needed to prevent new blockades from starting.

The RCMP’s timeline came in a “key messages” document prepared for RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki when she spoke with cabinet members on Feb. 20, six days after the act was first invoked.

Share