:
Good evening to the committee members and our guests here today.
I'd like to call this meeting to order and welcome everyone to meeting number nine of the Special Joint Committee on the Declaration of Emergency, created pursuant to the order of the House on March 2, 2022, and of the Senate on March 3, 2022.
Today's meeting is taking place in a hybrid format, pursuant to the order of the House dated November 25, 2021.
I'd like to remind all those present in the room to please follow the recommendations of the public health authorities, as well as the directives of the Board of Internal Economy, to maintain health and safety.
Should any technical or any other challenges arise, please advise me, as we may need to suspend for a few minutes to ensure that all members are able to fully participate.
Witnesses should also be aware that translation is available through the globe icon at the bottom of your screens and, of course, on the microphones in front of you.
We have with us today, from 6:30 to 8 p.m., representatives from the Department of Justice. We have François Daigle, who is the deputy minister of justice and deputy attorney general of Canada. We have Samantha Maislin Dickson, who is the assistant deputy minister of the public safety, defence and immigration portfolio. We have Jenifer Aitken, who is the acting assistant deputy minister of the central agencies portfolio; and Heather Watts, who is the deputy director general and general counsel for the human rights law section. Welcome.
You will all have five minutes for your opening remarks. We will begin....
Go ahead, Mr. Clerk.
Good evening, everyone.
[English]
Honourable joint chairs and committee members, thank you for the invitation to speak.
I want to cover three points in my opening remarks. First is the test to invoke the Emergencies Act. Second, I want to speak to the temporary measures. Third, I'll speak to compliance with the charter.
[Translation]
On the first element of the test, I invite you to read sections 3, 16 and 17 of the Emergencies Act. Section 3 states that a national emergency is an urgent and critical situation of a temporary nature that seriously endangers the health and safety of Canadians and that cannot be effectively dealt with under any other law of Canada.
[English]
I want to make two points about that.
First, on February 14, the Governor in Council decided that our country was indeed in such a crisis situation. The reasons for issuing the declaration of a public order emergency were set out in great detail in the public document required by section 58 of the act. It's that document that summarizes the facts that the GIC relied on at the time to come to the conclusions that there were reasonable grounds to invoke the Emergencies Act. I believe that this document is before the committee.
Second, the GIC determined that the situation had exceeded the capacity and authority of the provinces and territories to respond “effectively”, or “adéquatement” as it says in the French version.
The test is not whether other laws existed, like other provincial highway traffic acts. The test is whether they were effective at dealing with the emergency. Nor is the test whether they could have been effective. The test is whether they were effective. The government determined that they were not and enacted time-limited measures for law enforcement and financial service providers to use, at their discretion, to deal with the emergency.
[Translation]
The Emergency Measures Regulations that were made prohibited certain targeted conduct and gave peace officers the power to preserve and maintain the public peace.
Each of the prohibitions listed in sections 2 to 5 of the Regulations addressed behaviours observed during the unlawful blockades and the occupation of Ottawa streets. The key prohibition is set out in subsection 2(1), which supplements the powers to maintain the peace that police have at common law by prohibiting certain public assemblies. It does not affect all public assemblies, only a very precise, targeted type: a public assembly that may reasonably be expected to lead to a breach of the peace by the serious disruption of the movement of persons or goods or the serious interference with trade, the interference with the functioning of critical infrastructure, or the support of the threat or use of acts of serious violence against persons or property.
The measures also provided that a person must not bring children to unlawful assemblies—conduct that we all observed in Ottawa and Windsor. The measures also provided that a foreign national must not enter Canada with the intent to participate in an assembly referred to in that section, and prohibit providing property or funds to support unlawful assemblies.
The related Emergency Economic Measures Order, which provides for certain bank accounts to be frozen, was also very targeted and limited. The obligations to which financial institutions were subject no longer applied, that is, ceased to apply, if the “designated person”, a term defined in the order, ceased to engage in unlawful activities. It was therefore easy for a person to exempt themself from the freeze simply by leaving the unlawful assemblies.
[English]
The objectives of the measures were clear: to deter the attendance at unlawful assemblies, to bring an end to the unlawful blockades and get people to leave, and to prevent the formation of new unlawful blockades and protests.
Finally, on the charter, as the said at his appearance on April 26, the measures were consistent with the charter, and the declaration did not suspend the charter. That is clear from the act. The charter continued to protect rights and freedoms as the government took the necessary lawful and proportionate measures to address the blockades.
I want to explain what we do at the Department of Justice when we review new laws, like these temporary measures, for charter compliance. We are not the police deciding whether or how to use existing or new authorities, nor are we prosecutors deciding whether to pursue a prosecution. We review the law on its face, in this case the temporary orders, to understand their objectives and examine whether the measures are inconsistent with the charter.
The examination can include consideration of whether any interference with a charter right is justified in a free and democratic society as allowed by section 1 of the charter. We look at their scope and their relationship to the objectives of the measures. We rely on decisions from the courts, including the Supreme Court of Canada.
While we can't share our legal opinions that we may have prepared for the executive branch, we can explain the position of the government. The minister has already explained that his position was that the measures were targeted, proportional, time limited and charter compliant.
The minister has tabled today a charter backgrounder that sets out the charter considerations that go through sections 2(b), 2(c), 6, 7 and 8. I hope that will help your understanding and deliberations.
[Translation]
In conclusion, we found that, overall, the Regulations and the Order prevented the organizing of unlawful protests and enabled the police to get control of the situation. The occupiers left in order to avoid having their accounts frozen. People stopped bringing their children to unlawful protests, and this enabled the police to enforce the law in Ottawa. The measures also deterred other people from joining the blockades. Those were the actual objectives of the new measures adopted under the Emergencies Act.
That concludes my introduction. We are eager to answer your questions.
:
Thank you very much. I'll note that we went a bit beyond the five-minute scope, but it's important that those opening remarks were heard. In your remarks, you had mentioned a document that had been prepared. Has that been submitted for distribution at this committee?
A voice: It was distributed earlier today.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Matthew Green): Excellent. Thank you very much.
Before we get into the rounds, I would like you to note that in this committee we're going to be probably moving at a fairly rapid pace, given our time constraints. The member who has the floor controls their time. If you hear members say, “Thank you”, or if they gently interrupt you and interject to move on to the next question, I just want you to know that it's not personal. They would like to move on to the next question to be able to protect their time. I would ask that members do so in a way that is tactful and allows the discussion to flow.
If it is the case that a round comes to a close, but there is information that's being presented, I'll let you know and you can finish your thought. We certainly don't want to be cutting anybody off mid-sentence.
We will begin the first round with Mr. Motz, who will have five minutes.
Mr. Motz, the floor is yours.
Before you start the clock, I will just say publicly thank you for being here as department officials in person. This is one of the first times this has occurred, other than when we have had the ministers, and it says a lot about your willingness to be heard and to be open to what it is that we're doing. Thank you very much for doing that.
Deputy Minister Daigle, I just want to make a comment about your opening remarks. You indicated that the invocation was necessary because the existing laws basically were inadequate. This is not a question but a comment. I suggest that the existing laws were inadquately applied more than anything else.
Let me get into the questions. The Emergencies Act is clear, as you mentioned, sir, that a national emergency is “an urgent and critical situation of a temporary nature” that “cannot be effectively dealt with under any other law of Canada. Given the number of laws we have in this country that could have addressed these protests, the federal government must have reached a very high threshold before invoking the emergency powers.
Can you state categorically, yes or no, that the government exercised every legislative option before invoking the Emergencies Act?
Thank you to all the witnesses for your attendance today.
I will specifically be addressing questions to you, Mr. Daigle. I mean no disrespect to the ladies on the panel, but my area is focusing on legal threshold and charter compliance.
Before I get to that area, I want to highlight, in my opening remarks, that Perrin Beatty, a former defence minister and the author of this particular legislation, has said that extraordinary government powers require extraordinary accountability. This committee is legislatively constructed to thoroughly examine the government's role in the invocation of the act. We are not here to discuss the protesters themselves or the circumstances behind their arrival, but whether or not the legal threshold was met and was charter compliant. That's going to be my focus.
We know the act itself requires two thresholds to be met. You're aware of those thresholds. We have to establish that there's a threat to the security of Canada, which is largely defined in the CSIS Act. I take it that you're familiar with this act, Mr. Daigle.
I have a very brief point of order on something that was raised by Monsieur Fortin in the previous panel. It was the notion of the application of solicitor-client privilege to Crown lawyers or Department of Justice lawyers.
Just for the committee's edification, there is a case citation that I can provide, the case of the R. v. Campbell, 1999, 1 SCR 565, where the Supreme Court establishes quite clearly that solicitor-client privilege also applies to Department of Justice lawyers providing advice.
There is also a reference in Watson and McGowan, pages 1078 and 1079.
I just thought the committee should have that for its benefit. Thank you.
At this time, we have with us here today, between 8 p.m. and 9:30 p.m., representatives from the Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness. We have Mr. Rob Stewart, deputy minister. We have Dominic Rochon, senior assistant deputy minister, national security and cybersecurity branch; and we have Talal Dakalbab, assistant deputy minister, crime prevention branch.
You will be given five minutes for opening remarks.
I believe, Mr. Stewart, you'll be providing those opening remarks.
I'll just tell you now that when we get into our rounds of questioning, as you may have heard in previous rounds, it is within the purview of the committee members to direct and determine their time. If they ask you to move on to the next question, it's certainly nothing personal. You may hear me interject and say thank you to either wrap up the round or to move you on to the next topic.
With that being said, Mr. Stewart, the floor is yours for five minutes.
:
Thank you, and thank you for having us here.
I'm here today in follow-up to the presentation to this committee by to provide support for the study of the public order emergency and the role the Emergencies Act played in bringing it to a conclusion.
My presentation will focus on my role as the deputy minister of Public Safety in the following areas. First, I will address our understanding of the nature of the threats leading to the invocation of the Emergencies Act. Second will be how the Emergencies Act facilitated law enforcement actions, and third is the role we played in communication and coordination with provinces, territories and municipalities.
[Translation]
The public emergency in January and February 1922 was rooted in a movement centred on anti-government sentiments connected with the public health response to the COVID‑19 pandemic.
[English]
At that time, participants in protests and blockades in the nation's capital and at strategic ports of entry adopted tactics that disrupted the peace, impacted the Canadian economy and engendered national security risks. This included aggressive protest tactics, threatening behaviour, slowing down traffic and creating traffic jams, in particular, near ports of entry.
The freedom and well-being of citizens was negatively impacted, and businesses were forced to close either due to safety concerns or due to the disruption in the flow of goods and services through blocked ports of entry.
We also observed that convoys of large trucks, which were growing in terms of both size and number, were manifesting unpredictably around the country. In many locations, the protest moved beyond a peaceful threshold and became illegal, giving rise to a volatile and unpredictable environment at the protest sites, with an assessed potential to mobilize to violence.
Broadly speaking, and crucially, information about what was happening within protest groups was not easy to obtain. While CSIS did not identify specific IMVE threats, ideologically motived violent extremism threats, we were aware that some extremist supporters were seeking to link their causes to these protests.
I want to emphasize that CSIS does not investigate, as the director has testified, lawful advocacy, protest or dissent, except when it is carried out in conjunction with activities that constitute a threat to the security of Canada.
That said, assessments provided in a public unclassified space by the integrated threat assessment centre on ideologically motivated violent extremism helped inform our understanding of the complex and evolving nature of the threat environment, one that was spurred by misinformation and harmful rhetoric. It also pointed to the potential for lone actors to find an opportunity within protests—an environment in which determined, disaffected individuals could cause harm in a very short amount of time.
[Translation]
There was also a fear that the measures taken by the police would run up against firm and determined opposition that could cause problems and greater instability.
[English]
The reasons for issuing the declaration of a public order emergency were set in the public document of explanation pursuant to section 58, as has been mentioned to this committee.
Furthermore, the Houses of Parliament were provided with the consultations document. These documents highlight that, between the end of January and February 14, the escalation of the threat across the country had been regularly communicated with and by PTs and police of jurisdiction to the federal government. They requested the federal government's action in supporting police of jurisdiction to address the threat.
Officials from Public Safety, I and my colleagues, engaged with provincial, territorial and municipal partners on multiple occasions on topics ranging from additional support for law enforcement to reduce illegal crowd gathering to increasing powers to manage the convoys, including infractions, fines, enforcement regimes, tow trucks and possible deployment of additional RCMP materiel and human resources.
[Translation]
That is the context in which the Emergencies Act was invoked in mid-February.
[English]
The act provided tools to bolster law enforcement powers such as access to tow trucks to end the blockades. The act also provided tools to deter the continuing of illegal protests and restore public order such as the prohibition on public assembly and the economic measures on convoy financing.
Within the federal government, Public Safety Canada, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, the Canada Border Services Agency, Justice Canada, Royal Canadian Mounted Police and Transport Canada all played central roles.
Through the three weeks of this crisis, we communicated and coordinated closely with other partners. Collaboration with provincial and territorial counterparts took place through an already-established ADM-level FPT committee, the crime prevention and policing committee, as well as through conversations I had with my provincial deputy minister counterparts. In addition, as deputy minister, I engaged with the City of Ottawa manager, the RCMP, the Ontario Provincial Police, the Ottawa Police Service leaders and provincial deputy minister counterparts.
In conclusion, the Emergencies Act was invoked in a volatile environment with potential risk to national security across Canada, taking into account the view and advice of many stakeholders.
I look forward to your questions.
:
It was in advance of Valentine's Day.
In the course of our consultations with federal and provincial colleagues and police of jurisdiction, it came to our attention that, in some circumstances, there were a lot of challenges in terms of enforcing the law. That related to the number of people who were available to do so and, therefore, their ability to apply the laws and the bylaws.
What we also became conscious of, and I've mentioned this before, is the evolving nature of the protest, including the potential for further blockades. It was in part, as I've suggested, the aim of the act to deter those from occurring.
Thank you to the witnesses.
Mr. Stewart, I'll start off by saying that, in the words of Perrin Beatty, extraordinary powers require extraordinary [government accountability. With all due respect to you, sir, to the questions put to you by my colleague Mr. Motz, I do not accept your response that did not use his words appropriately, when he's on record as stating that law enforcement asked for the use of the Emergencies Act. Your response was that he chose the wrong set of words, or he was misunderstood.
is a senior government official. He's been a member of Parliament for a significant period of time. He is a lawyer. Words matter. He spoke in the House numerous times. He gave speeches in the House numerous times. He responded to questions, did press releases and went on televison. Every time he did that, Mr. Stewart, he was consistent in his messaging that law enforcement asked for the use of the Emergencies Act. Only until law enforcement, testifying at this committee and other committees, flat out refuted that statement did we hear a change in Minister Mendicino by stating they were consulting with law enforcement.
My question to you is this: Were you yourself responsible, or members of your office responsible, in terms of giving those words that law enforcement asked for the Emergencies Act on numerous occasions?
:
I'll be very brief, Mr. Chair.
I want to thank people for their patience.
I propose to amend Mr. Green's motion by adding “dans le cas où ils existeraient” at the very end of the sentence.
I'm going to read my amendment in English.
[English]
At the very end of the sentence that is before you, members, I propose to amend the motion by adding the words “should they exist”. The reason for this amendment is that, as we heard in earlier testimony this evening during the meeting from the deputy minister of justice, no such secret orders in council exist. That is his testimony, and the motion, as written, presupposes the existence of secret orders in council.
We are happy to vote in favour of the motion and have an official response given to the question. However, we would ask that the amendment be added in order that we don't presuppose the existence of any such documents.
:
Perhaps I can bring things back, because we do have a hard stop.
I think the motion is wise. The senators have their considerations as well. It allows our analyst and clerk to go away and come back with a date. We'll be meeting next week and the week after that to make sure we zero it in.
If we can get agreement around the table that we'll take that approach, which I think is a very wise and sound approach, of really getting back into this in the fall, then the direction will go out and we'll come back in the next meeting. Do we have any objections to that?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
The Joint Chair (Mr. Matthew Green): That being said, let the record show that it's unanimous consent on that.
That's not for the dates. They're going to go to you with the dates, and we're going to come back in the next meeting to confirm it.
That being said, I'd like to thank everybody for their participation in this evening's meeting.
I will now adjourn this meeting.