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Watchdog Asks Whether RCMP Brass Shielded Lobbyists in Ottawa’s Influence Scandals

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Sam Cooper's avatar Sam Cooper

From ArriveCAN to SNC-Lavalin, new scrutiny of Ottawa’s regulators raises questions about whether the RCMP and federal oversight bodies have become politically neutered.

Canada’s federal lobbying commissioner and the RCMP are under new scrutiny from a national transparency watchdog demanding to know whether the lobbying regulator has concealed rulings in nine violations that were referred to the Mounties — and later quietly sent back without prosecution — in a wide range of cases from the ArriveCAN procurement imbroglio to the explosive SNC-Lavalin affair, in which a former attorney general told the RCMP they could look at criminal obstruction charges.

The allegations relate to testimony now before a Parliamentary ethics committee, which has revived long-standing concerns from critics about Canada’s politically appointed watchdogs — and about the RCMP itself.

Framing his most pointed suggestion — that the RCMP may be politically neutered — in the form of questions, Duff Conacher of Democracy Watch, a witness before the committee, asked in a release Thursday:
“Did former RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki let off the lobbyists because she was appointed by and served at the pleasure of former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau? Did … current RCMP Commissioner Michael Duheme let off the lobbyists so Trudeau would appoint him first as Interim Commissioner in March 2023 and then as Commissioner in April 2024?”

Conacher’s statement presses for the release of nine rulings by Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger — cases referred to the RCMP and later returned to her office without charges. He accuses Bélanger’s office of failing to release those rulings for more than a year, despite access-to-information requests dating back to 2023.

In Conacher’s October 30 release, Democracy Watch accused both the RCMP and the Commissioner’s office of “blatantly violating” the Access to Information Act. The hidden cases, the watchdog said, may involve unregistered or unethical lobbying by major corporations including Facebook, WE Charity, SNC-Lavalin, and Imperial Oil.

“By continuing to hide her rulings on nine lobbying violations, Commissioner Bélanger is covering up scandalous situations, protecting the lobbyists and the public officials they were lobbying,” Conacher said. “It’s shameful that the RCMP, whose top officers are chosen by and serve at the pleasure of the ruling-party Cabinet, continue to take so long to investigate lobbyists who violate the law — and that they fail to prosecute almost all violations.”

Renewing his attack on RCMP leadership, Conacher added: “Their negligently bad enforcement record is more clear evidence that a new, fully independent anti-corruption federal police and prosecution force is needed.”

Conacher cites hearing evidence that Bélanger testified before the House Ethics Committee on April 16, 2024, acknowledging that her office had referred 15 cases to the RCMP since 2018 — and that the Mounties had “let off” the lobbyists in nine of them. In her most recent appearance on October 6, 2025, she updated that total to 18 cases referred, with 10 returned without charges, two prosecutions completed, two “in discussion,” and two still under investigation, Conacher said.

Conacher pointed to Bélanger’s confrontational exchange over the ArriveCAN procurement scandal with Conservative MP Michael Barrett during the April 2024 hearings.
“I wrote you about a month ago regarding GC Strategies. This is the Liberal government’s hand-picked favourite IT firm. They don’t do work on the applications but collect a commission for connecting the government with unknown firms,” Barrett said. “Can you tell us today if you’re investigating GC Strategies or its principals for contravening the Lobbying Act?”
“As I told you in the letter, I’m very much aware of the facts of that case, and I cannot confirm whether I’m investigating. You know that I do that because I do not want to jeopardize a possible RCMP investigation,” Bélanger answered.

Barrett then listed the company’s reported meetings with senior officials across government, including former Chief Information Officer Paul Girard and a series of departmental directors.

While contracting rules were breached, no criminal charges have been laid. In June 2025, Public Services and Procurement Canada barred GC Strategies from federal contracts for seven years. The government also barred two other firms involved in the ArriveCAN project — Dalian Enterprises and Coradix Technology Consulting — from future federal tenders.

The ArriveCAN app was launched in April 2020 as a digital tool to track traveller health information and customs declarations during the COVID-19 pandemic. Auditor General Karen Hogan later reported that poor record-keeping and excessive reliance on outside contractors caused the project’s cost to balloon from an initial $2.35 million to about $60 million, exposing what she called “a breakdown of basic management controls.” According to her report, GC Strategies alone was awarded more than $19 million for its share of the contracts.

An independent audit by the Office of the Auditor General of Canada found that the federal government awarded 106 contracts valued at approximately $92.7 million between April 2015 and March 2024, many without competition.

Conacher’s most recent demand for disclosure dovetails with the committee’s ongoing probe of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner, following testimony by former Privy Council Clerk Michael Wernick. In that tense hearing earlier this week, Wernick was pressed on whether prime ministers’ conflicts of interest should be policed internally through “ethics screens,” or whether blind trusts and full public disclosure are required. Wernick defended the current system as “one tool in a broader toolbox,” while Conservative MPs Michael Barrett and Michael Cooper countered that it leaves Canadians relying on “hope and trust.”

The hearings also raised concerns about Prime Minister Mark Carney’s extensive Brookfield holdings, now shielded by an ethics screen covering about 100 files — what Wernick called “the most extensive private-sector record since Paul Martin.”

The parallels between the Bélanger and Wernick hearings highlight the same structural concerns: officials accountable to the Prime Minister are also responsible for policing the Prime Minister and Cabinet’s conflicts. For Democracy Watch, that circular system — extending from the Lobbying Commissioner and Ethics Commissioner to the RCMP Commissioner — represents not oversight, but insulation.

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Watchdog Presses Ottawa to Release Hidden Lobbying Rulings

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The Opposition with Dan Knight

Dan Knight's avatar Dan Knight

With nine cases still undisclosed and a reappointment controversy surrounding the Lobbying Commissioner, the group warns that federal enforcement of ethics laws is losing public trust

More than a year has passed. Ten separate lobbying violations. Nine of them returned by the RCMP without prosecution. Zero public rulings. And a Commissioner who was quietly re-appointed for another seven-year term by the Trudeau regime.

What am I describing? A third-world dictatorship? Nope. Welcome to Ottawa—where democracy dies behind closed doors, and corporate lobbyists write the laws under the table.

Today, Democracy Watch, the last half-functioning watchdog in this country, blew the whistle. Again. They released a bombshell press release accusing Nancy Bélanger, Trudeau’s handpicked Lobbying Commissioner, of hiding her rulings on serious violations of the Lobbying Act. These aren’t minor infractions. We’re talking about shady dealings by major players: Facebook, WE Charity, SNC-Lavalin, and Imperial Oil—names you may remember from past scandals the media tried to memory-hole.

Full press release here

The facts are simple. Democracy Watch filed official requests to get these rulings. The RCMP, under Trudeau’s appointees, delayed disclosure for two years. Bélanger’s office extended its own deadline, then just… never released them. That’s illegal, by the way. But when the Liberals are in charge, the law doesn’t apply to them—only to you.

Now, why would they bury these reports? Well, ask yourself: who benefits?

Start with Facebook. Back in 2018, Kevin Chan—their top Canadian fixer—was caught giving “advice” to Cabinet ministers while failing to register as a lobbyist. Not exactly subtle. Then there’s WE Charity, Trudeau’s favorite shell organization for funneling money to friends and family. They handed out luxury trips to Bill Morneau’s family. Did they face charges? Nope. SNC-Lavalin—remember them? The company Trudeau went to the mat for in 2019, firing his own Attorney General to protect. And Imperial Oil? They lobbied Andrew Scheer and Karina Gould at a corporate event they sponsored. Nothing to see here, folks.

Here’s the question no journalist in Ottawa will ask: Did Nancy Bélanger bury these rulings in exchange for her reappointment last December? Did she gut the Lobbyists’ Code of Conduct, water down the rules, and turn a blind eye to violations just to keep her job? It’s not a conspiracy theory—it’s an obvious incentive. And it stinks.

Democracy Watch co-founder Duff Conacher was blunt: “By continuing to hide her rulings on nine lobbying violations, Commissioner Bélanger is covering up scandalous situations, protecting the lobbyists and politicians and public officials they were lobbying.”

That’s the polite version.

The real version? The Trudeau Liberal regime—and yes, we’re still calling it the Trudeau regime even with Mark Carney as his bland globalist replacement—is corrupt to its core. This is a government that protects its friends, buries oversight, and weaponizes institutions like the RCMP and the Office of the Lobbying Commissioner to silence dissent and cover up for insiders.

Just look at the pattern:

  • RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki was Trudeau’s puppet.
  • Her successor, Michael Duheme, was appointed after the RCMP “let off” the lobbyists.
  • Bélanger, who failed to disclose 10 rulings, gets another 7 years in power.

Coincidence? Please.

Eighty percent of Canadians—across the spectrum—say they’re concerned about unethical lobbying. And they should be. Because what we’re seeing isn’t just a few bad actors. It’s institutionalized corruption. And worse—it’s bipartisan silence. Where is the outrage? Where is the mainstream press? They’re too busy fact-checking memes and writing hit pieces on Pierre Poilievre to ask why the Lobbying Act has been turned into toilet paper.

The Liberal swamp didn’t get drained. It got deeper. And if you think electing a new face like Mark Carney will change anything, think again.

Carney was Trudeau’s right-hand globalist — a man who cut his teeth at Goldman Sachs, then went on to run both the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England. He didn’t come back to serve Canadians — he came to manage them, like assets on a spreadsheet. He now rules Ottawa like a boardroom, where accountability is a nuisance and democracy is a branding exercise.

The Liberal swamp didn’t get drained. It got deeper. And if you think electing a new face like Mark Carney will change anything, think again.

Lets be clear: What this country needs isn’t another bureaucratic shuffle. We need a reckoning. We need real transparency. And we need to dismantle the corrupt machinery that allows lobbyists, politicians, and unaccountable commissioners to play god behind closed doors.

This isn’t about left or right. This is about the survival of Canadian democracy.

Because right now, it’s being auctioned off—one lobbying meeting at a time.

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Crime

Canada Seizes 4,300 Litres of Chinese Drug Precursors Amid Trump’s Tariff Pressure Over Fentanyl Flows

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Sam Cooper's avatar Sam Cooper

In what appears to be the second-largest Chinese precursor-chemical seizure in British Columbia in the past decade, Canadian border and police officials announced they intercepted more than 4,300 litres of chemicals used to manufacture fentanyl and other synthetic drugs at a notoriously troubled port in Delta, B.C.

The announcement of a seizure that occurred in May 2025 comes amid President Donald Trump’s continuing pressure on Ottawa to crack down on fentanyl trafficking in the province — which U.S. officials say has become a key production and shipment point for Chinese and Mexican traffickers.

The seizure — announced jointly by the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) and the RCMP — underscores the scale and persistence of global trafficking networks funnelling illicit materials into Canada’s drug markets.

According to the agencies, border officers examined two marine containers that arrived from China in mid-May, both bound for Calgary, Alberta. Acting on intelligence developed by CBSA’s Pacific Region, officers discovered 3,600 litres of 1,4 Butanediol, a key ingredient for producing GHB, often known as the “date-rape drug”; 500 litres of Propionyl Chloride, a chemical precursor used to synthesize fentanyl; and 200 litres of Gamma Butyrolactone (GBL), another controlled intoxicant.

The chemicals were concealed inside 60 clear jugs and 20 blue drums within the containers. Investigators believe the shipment was intended for use in clandestine drug laboratories. The RCMP confirmed that an investigation into the importation network remains ongoing.

The seizure comes amid growing concern about Canada’s port security, particularly in Metro Vancouver, where experts and local officials say criminal networks are exploiting gaps in federal enforcement.

The Delta seizure follows a series of major CBSA operations targeting precursor chemicals at Pacific ports. In May 2022, CBSA officers in the Metro Vancouver District examined a container from China declared as “toys” and discovered 1,133 kilograms of the fentanyl-precursor chemical Propionyl Chloride, with the potential to produce more than a billion doses of fentanyl.

Public Safety Canada also reported that in the first half of 2021, CBSA seized more than 5,000 kilograms of precursor chemicals, compared with just 512 kilograms in 2020 — reflecting what officials called a “dramatic escalation” in attempts to smuggle fentanyl inputs into the country.

In 2023, the City of Delta released a report highlighting major vulnerabilities at port terminal facilities, warning that there is “literally no downside” for organized criminals to infiltrate port operations. The report noted that British Columbia’s provincial threat assessment rated ports as highly susceptible to corruption and organized-crime infiltration.

At the time, Delta Mayor George Harvie called the lack of a dedicated national port-policing force “a threat to national security.” In comments to the Canadian Press, Harvie said that while Canada’s ports fall under federal jurisdiction, the “total absence of uniformed police at the facilities makes them obvious targets for criminal elements — from Mexican drug cartels to biker gangs.”

“We’re witnessing a relentless flow of illegal drugs, weapons and contraband into Canada through our ports, and that threatens our national security,” Harvie said.

The Port of Vancouver complex, which includes major terminals in Delta, Surrey, and Vancouver, handles roughly three million containers annually, with millions more expected as port expansion plans move forward.

The Delta report reiterated how difficult it has become to police these sprawling operations since the Ports Canada Police were disbanded in 1997. More than a quarter-century later, Harvie said, the consequences of that decision are now “alarmingly clear.”

The CBSA announcement today comes as U.S. President Donald Trump has imposed tariffs on Canadian exports, accusing Ottawa of failing to interdict the flow of fentanyl and precursor chemicals trafficked through British Columbia ports. Washington has repeatedly pressed Canada to strengthen port enforcement and anti-money-laundering controls, citing the West Coast’s role in China- and Mexico-linked trafficking networks.

Simultaneously, in trade negotiations with Beijing, Mr. Trump announced a reduction in tariffs tied to the fentanyl supply chain — raising concern that Washington has eased pressure on China, the primary source of finished fentanyl now responsible for hundreds of thousands of overdose deaths across North America.

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