Politics -   

Tory staffer had help vetting information queries

Viewer

CTV News Video

Power Play: Government House Leader John Baird
The government house leader says Paradis took the right course of action by dismissing his aid despite saying in the past ministers should be held accountable to Parliament and not aids. He says in regards to the hiring of Nigel Wright, it does not constitute a conflict of interest.
Power Play: MP panel on the issues
The Liberals and the NDP say the Tories choose to divide Canadians rather than bring them together, by silencing voices and continuously suppressing information as seen with the issue surrounding Zijad Delic and Nigel Wright.
CTV News Channel: Liberals question the Tories
Liberal Leader Michael Ignatieff continues to accuse the government of partisan spending and funding unnecessary projects and failing to meet the needs of Canadians and families most vulnerable.

Font-size: Bigger  Smaller  Share Share Print Print

Photos

Slideshow image

View Larger Image

The Canadian Press

Date: Mon. Oct. 4 2010 5:59 PM ET

OTTAWA — Two other members of cabinet minister Christian Paradis' political staff were involved in gatekeeping the release of Access to Information documents, internal emails suggest.

Last week, one of Paradis' aides resigned after The Canadian Press reported he had intervened on at least four occasions in the release of government records.

Sebastien Togneri had testified earlier in the year that he had only overstepped his bounds a single time when he worked for Paradis at Public Works.

Paradis, now natural resources minister, has referred the matter to Information Commissioner Suzanne Legault.

"I asked Mr. Togneri, he said it was the only incident, he testified to that. Requests for access to information, I'm not sure if you know how big that file is, it's huge," Paradis said Monday.

"There's a question of trust there, and he assured me it was an error made in good faith. When I found out about these other cases, I accepted his resignation, I sent along the file, as I should -- it's my responsibility as minister."

But Togneri was not the only political staffer within Paradis' office who was in the loop about sensitive Access to Information requests.

Two policy advisers -- Jillian Andrews and Marc Toupin -- appear in emails between Togneri and bureaucrats that were recently delivered to a House of Commons committee, and obtained by The Canadian Press. All three staffers moved from Public Works to Natural Resources with Paradis last winter.

In July 2009, Togneri asked bureaucrats to remove records from an Access to Information request about preparations for U.S. President Barack Obama's first official visit to Canada. Togneri argued the department was providing too much information, that it was part of daily operations to prepare for such visits -- contradicting a senior civil servant's opinion.

Andrews was copied on a series of emails.

"For more in depth analysis, please speak to Jillian," Togneri wrote, referring to Andrews.

In another exchange of emails, bureaucrats wanted to know more from Togneri about material he had highlighted for exclusion from an Access to Information request.

Togneri directs them to "please contact Marc Toupin on that file."

The emails do not indicate what happened after Togneri referred bureaucrats to his colleagues.

Andrews and Toupin did not respond to an emailed request for comment. Paradis did not respond directly to questions about the involvement of other staff.

"The commissioner will do whatever she wants. She has the file, she has it completely," Paradis said.

"I'm not here as minister to judge what happened, what the individual did, but one thing is for sure, I found out about these incidents on Thursday."

The office of the information commissioner is currently poring over more than 1,200 pages of documents from Public Works. It will decide whether to launch a fresh investigation, or whether to widen its existing probe.

Andrews was called as a witness before the Commons access to information committee last spring when Togneri identified her as colleague who also reviewed the release of documents.

But Andrews was shielded from appearing after the Conservative government declared that only ministers would speak on behalf of political staff. They also refused to make available any of their internal communications.

Both the Liberals and the Bloc Quebecois have called for Paradis to resign.

Liberal MP Wayne Easter, who sits on the Commons committee reviewing access issues, said he believes the government became worried that more damaging information would emerge.

"We certainly believe that this is systemic within the government, that there is a pattern here of denying access or changing information that should be available under access to information," Easter said in an interview.

"To us, this seems more widespread than just Togneri."

It is common practice for ministerial staff to receive notification of the pending release of access-to-information requests so that they can prepare communications material. But as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff noted earlier this year in a memo, political staff do not have the delegated authority to make access to information decisions.

The case that spurred the initial probe by the information commissioner and the Commons committee involved an access-to-information request made by The Canadian Press.

Togneri disagreed with some of the records that were being released. A senior bureaucrat rushed to the Public Works mailroom to retrieve, and later reduce, the package.

Togneri told the committee he had made a "mistake," and said it was the only time he had taken such action.

Share with your social Network:

Facebook DIGG Newsvine Delicious Twitter StumbeUpon Reddit Yahoo! Buzz

 

Advertisement

Contest

User Tools

About the tools

Need to get in touch with CTV? You can email the CTV web team using the 'Feedback' button.

Share it with your network of friends

Share this CTV article or feature with your friends. Click on the icon for your favourite social networking or messaging system, and follow the prompts.

Facebook

Share this article with Facebook

DIGG

Share this article with Digg

Newsvine

Share this article with Newsvine

Delicious

Share this article with delicious

Email

Share this article.
Send Email

Twitter

Share this article with Twitter

StumbleUpon

Share this article with StumbleUpon

Reddit

Share this article with Reddit

Yahoo! Buzz

Share this article with Yahoo! Buzz

Most Talked about Stories

These are HR issues more than technology issues. Flat out, the government has too many fingers in too many pies, and too many people working at cross purposes. Streamline government, return it to its aggregate purposes, and most of this would be less threatening.

Frank Buchan

Bureaucrats with BlackBerrys a risk: privacy report