Rapporteur David Johnson, Eminent Canadian

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,195
8,035
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
Former Governor General David Johnston has agreed to take up the post as the “special rapporteur” charged with “protecting democracy” from foreign threats. There’s just one problem: Johnston isn’t actually tasked with finding out any of the things that people care about.

According to an official statement, Johnston’s only job is to “look into foreign interference in the last two federal general elections.”

But that part of the scandal has already been pretty well covered; over the last 12 months reporting by Global News, the Globe and Mail, Postmedia and others have unearthed a number of funding and electoral anomalies in the last two elections that seem to point towards some level of coordinated Chinese interference.

What is less known is to what extent the Trudeau government knew this was going and refused to do anything about it – possibly because the interference tactics were predominantly working to get Liberal candidates elected. These questions are not what David Johnson is not tasked with finding out about by Justin Trudeau about Justin Trudeau.

When former Governor General David Johnston was selected Wednesday as Canada’s “special rapporteur” to probe the extent of Chinese electoral interference, it was quickly noted that Johnston is a registered member of the Trudeau Foundation.
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Morris Rosenberg — who was hired by the Trudeau government to draft an initial probeinto foreign interference in the 2021 election — is a former director of the Trudeau Foundation.
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Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
5,726
3,599
113
Edmonton
Former Governor General David Johnston has agreed to take up the post as the “special rapporteur” charged with “protecting democracy” from foreign threats. There’s just one problem: Johnston isn’t actually tasked with finding out any of the things that people care about.

According to an official statement, Johnston’s only job is to “look into foreign interference in the last two federal general elections.”

But that part of the scandal has already been pretty well covered; over the last 12 months reporting by Global News, the Globe and Mail, Postmedia and others have unearthed a number of funding and electoral anomalies in the last two elections that seem to point towards some level of coordinated Chinese interference.

What is less known is to what extent the Trudeau government knew this was going and refused to do anything about it – possibly because the interference tactics were predominantly working to get Liberal candidates elected. These questions are not what David Johnson is not tasked with finding out about by Justin Trudeau about Justin Trudeau.

When former Governor General David Johnston was selected Wednesday as Canada’s “special rapporteur” to probe the extent of Chinese electoral interference, it was quickly noted that Johnston is a registered member of the Trudeau Foundation.
View attachment 17737
Morris Rosenberg — who was hired by the Trudeau government to draft an initial probeinto foreign interference in the 2021 election — is a former director of the Trudeau Foundation.
View attachment 17738
Waste of time & money as anything that comes of this will be shelved & nothing will result. This Government will ignore any & all recommendations.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,195
8,035
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he’s “not satisfied” with his party’s confidence-and-supply agreement with the Liberals — signed a year ago this week — because it’s shown him he could do a better job running the country than the current government.

“I'm not satisfied, because I don't want to just push government,” he added. “I want to be the one making the decisions for the interests of people, and having been in a position where I can actually influence decisions, I've seen how much better we would do if we were the ones calling the shots.”
Since the Non-Coalition Coalition agreement was struck, Singh has yet to name a deal breaker.

The NDP sided with the Liberals in invoking the Emergencies Act to dismantle the trucker protests last year and have declined to pull their support for the government amid ongoing calls to hold a public inquiry into foreign interference.

"We always have the right, if the government breaks any conditions of the agreement, if they don't follow through with what we “forced” them to agree to, we have then the power or the option of withdrawing our support," Singh told his caucus in January.

Canadians will know by the summer whether former governor general David Johnston wants a public inquiry to probe Beijing's election interference and what the Liberal government knew about it.

Canadians know right now that most MPs in the House of Commons voted in favour of calling for a public inquiry into foreign election interference Thursday, ramping up the pressure on the federal government following fresh allegations about China's ‘alleged’ meddling in Canada's affairs.

The NDP “Non-Binding” motion passed with 172 votes in favour and 149 against.

If Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was going to take seriously foreign interference in Canada’s democratic institutions, it would have happened after he received the Aug. 30, 2019 annual report of the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians. (NSICOP)

After all, he created NSICOP in 2017.
The true threat to Canadian democracy from the infiltration of the Liberal Party of Canada by China’s communist government is not that the outcome of elections has been altered, but rather that the government has been compromised in its ability to serve Canadians by caucus members and staffers who are nearly as loyal to a hostile foreign power as they are to this country.
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No one may serve two masters, not even a Liberal MP.

The threat is evident in the case of Toronto-area MP Han Dong, who resigned from the Liberal caucus Thursday to sit as an independent. Han Dong may well turn out to be innocent of colluding with China to keep two Canadians hostage, but there is more than enough evidence to assert the Liberal party has been co-opted.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was asked Friday by reporters about whether he believed Dong advocated for delaying the Michaels’ freedom.

The prime minister did not directly answer that question despite his office’s review of the conversation’s transcript.
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“Dong gave a strong speech in the House that I recommend people listen to. We fully accept that he is stepping away from the Liberal caucus in order to vigorously contest these allegations,” the prime minister said.

Since 2019, there have been three votes on Canada-China relations. One was to review “the Canada–China relationship,” the second a call to combat growing Chinese foreign operations in Canada, and third recognizing that authoritarian regimes like China “increasingly pose a threat to the rules-based international order.”

Dong voted with the entire or vast majority of the Liberal caucus against the three motions.

On Feb. 1, a Liberal motion was brought forward condemning China’s human rights abuses of the Uyghur minority in Xinjiang and called on the government to bring 10,000 Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims to Canada.

Dong voted before and after the Uyghur genocide motion but missed the show of hands on the Uyghurs, which passed with the unanimous consent of all 322 MPs present. His absence was first reported by the National Post.

In February 2021, there was a House vote to declare that China’s treatment of the Uyghurs constituted genocide.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet abstained, but MPs were free to vote. Dong skipped that motion, which passed unanimously.

In 2021, a Conservative motion sponsored by MP Michael Chong requested that the Public Health Agency turn over unredacted documents related to the shipment of viruses sent from Canada’s National Microbiology Laboratory to Wuhan, China in 2019, and the subsequent firing of two scientists from the Winnipeg facility.

Dong voted with the nearly entire Liberal caucus against the motion, which nonetheless passed in Parliament.

In October 2022, Dong indeed joined 323 MPs in voting for the politically sensitive country (Taiwan) to become a WHO member. And in June 2021, Dong joined all 327 MPs in favour of unanimously passing a Parliamentary committee motion to condemn Chinese sanctions levied against Conservative MP Michael Chong.

In February, Dong publicly supported the Liberal government’s move to expand the open-work permit program for Hong Kong residents. Maybe it’s all just another liberal coincidence?
 

Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
5,726
3,599
113
Edmonton
Safe guarding their pensions . Two more years baby .
Wouldn't you just love to work for a company and after 6 years have a "healthy" pension? Sure would be nice right? Why is this even a thing? Why wouldn't they have to put in more time before having a pension or better yet, how about no pension at all.
 
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petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,373
11,436
113
Low Earth Orbit
Wouldn't you just love to work for a company and after 6 years have a "healthy" pension? Sure would be nice right? Why is this even a thing? Why wouldn't they have to put in more time before having a pension or better yet, how about no pension at all.
I'd settle for a "transition to public life allowance" along the lines of EI until they find another job.
 

pgs

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 29, 2008
26,652
6,989
113
B.C.
Wouldn't you just love to work for a company and after 6 years have a "healthy" pension? Sure would be nice right? Why is this even a thing? Why wouldn't they have to put in more time before having a pension or better yet, how about no pension at all.
We have to pay them a good salary and benefit package to attract the best and brightest . That’s how they sold the advent of career politicians to the masses .
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,195
8,035
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
In recent months, Canada’s Liberal government has been embroiled in a new controversy involving allegations of Chinese foreign interference in the country’s last two federal elections. News reports citing national security sources have claimed Beijing sought to ensure the Liberals won re-election in 2021 and worked to defeat some Conservative politicians deemed unfriendly to China.

This week, a Toronto-area MP resigned from the Liberal caucus after a new story was published, citing two anonymous sources, that alleges he advised a Chinese diplomat to delay Kovrig’s and Spavor’s release. He has denied the allegations.

The joint statement said the two countries will “continue to cooperate on countering foreign interference.”
Biden himself did not weigh in on the topic of interference when the two world leaders spoke to reporters Friday.
The United States, U.K. and Australia announced the formation of a security pact to counter China’s growing ambitions in the Indo-Pacific region. Much of the coverage has centred on a deal that would see the U.S. sell Australia the technology to build nuclear-powered submarines.

But the pact covers far more than Aussie subs. It includes close co-operation on cyberintelligence, artificial intelligence, quantum computing and undersea surveillance. Since cyberspying and hacking are increasingly dangerous forms of state-to-state espionage, this three-way exchange is huge.

It’s also huge that Canada was not included — and it was no accident.

The Trudeau Liberals are soft — super soft — on China. Our traditional defence and intelligence partners no longer fully trust us.
 
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Dixie Cup

Senate Member
Sep 16, 2006
5,726
3,599
113
Edmonton
In recent months, Canada’s Liberal government has been embroiled in a new controversy involving allegations of Chinese foreign interference in the country’s last two federal elections. News reports citing national security sources have claimed Beijing sought to ensure the Liberals won re-election in 2021 and worked to defeat some Conservative politicians deemed unfriendly to China.

This week, a Toronto-area MP resigned from the Liberal caucus after a new story was published, citing two anonymous sources, that alleges he advised a Chinese diplomat to delay Kovrig’s and Spavor’s release. He has denied the allegations.

The joint statement said the two countries will “continue to cooperate on countering foreign interference.”
Biden himself did not weigh in on the topic of interference when the two world leaders spoke to reporters Friday.
The United States, U.K. and Australia announced the formation of a security pact to counter China’s growing ambitions in the Indo-Pacific region. Much of the coverage has centred on a deal that would see the U.S. sell Australia the technology to build nuclear-powered submarines.

But the pact covers far more than Aussie subs. It includes close co-operation on cyberintelligence, artificial intelligence, quantum computing and undersea surveillance. Since cyberspying and hacking are increasingly dangerous forms of state-to-state espionage, this three-way exchange is huge.

It’s also huge that Canada was not included — and it was no accident.

The Trudeau Liberals are soft — super soft — on China. Our traditional defence and intelligence partners no longer fully trust us.
I would also hesitate to give anything to Australia. Some of the things I've read leads me to believe that they have a relationship of sorts with China that may not be in Australia's best interests and that China is kind of taking advantage. I would do my due diligence before giving them anything. New Zealand as well. From what I've read in various articles, both have China's talons inserted - it's just a question of by how much.
 
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Taxslave2

House Member
Aug 13, 2022
2,771
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Wouldn't you just love to work for a company and after 6 years have a "healthy" pension? Sure would be nice right? Why is this even a thing? Why wouldn't they have to put in more time before having a pension or better yet, how about no pension at all.
They also get severance pay. Even when they decide not to run again.
 

Ron in Regina

"Voice of the West" Party
Apr 9, 2008
23,195
8,035
113
Regina, Saskatchewan
I would also hesitate to give anything to Australia. Some of the things I've read leads me to believe that they have a relationship of sorts with China that may not be in Australia's best interests and that China is kind of taking advantage. I would do my due diligence before giving them anything. New Zealand as well. From what I've read in various articles, both have China's talons inserted - it's just a question of by how much.
It would be tough for most countries on Earth not to have a trade relationship with China & it’s economy, but for New Zealand & Australia, geographically speaking, China (along with India and Japan) would be a natural customers for their natural resources:
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Regardless of what kind of dirty shits the Chinese Government happens to be, they’re still in charge of a population of about a Billion & a Half people, in close proximity to Australia and New Zealand. It’s not like the Panda hasn’t flexed its economic mass against both of these countries either.

As far as concerns about China’s talon’s being inserted and how far (?), think of how Canada is perceived from the outside looking in (?), especially in the last decade?

Economic Trade partners are not necessarily Military Allies by any means:
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Aside from each other, the New Zealand and Australian Allies are not exactly their Neighbours:
 
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