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‘You shouldn’t need more tools’ to clear bridge protest in Windsor: Trudeau to Ford

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By Laura Osman and David Fraser in Ottawa

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Ontario Premier Doug Ford last winter that police shouldn’t need more legal tools to clear protesters from the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, according to evidence released through a public inquiry Tuesday.

A readout of their conversation on Feb. 9 was submitted to the Public Order Emergency Commission, which is investigating the government’s decision to use emergency powers in an effort to clear protest blockades in downtown Ottawa and at several border crossings.

The conversation took place five days before Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act.

The summary said Ford told Trudeau reopening the Ambassador Bridge was the priority, and that Ontario’s attorney general was looking at legal ways to give the police more tools to deal with it.

“You shouldn’t need more tools — legal tools — they are barricading the (Ontario) economy and doing millions of damage a day and harming people’s lives,” Trudeau said in response, according to the document, explaining the protesters were not obeying the law.

“We’ve got to respond quickly to this.”

Asked about the exchange on Tuesday, Trudeau said it’s important that Canadians see what governments and people were facing during the “convoy occupations.”

“Obviously, we looked at the Emergencies Act as a measure of last resort,” Trudeau said at a news conference in New Brunswick.

“We needed to make sure that we were trying to get things done without having to bring in extraordinary powers.”

Demonstrators blockaded the Ambassador Bridge, a key border crossing to Detroit, on Feb. 7 as part of a series of protests against COVID-19 restrictions and the Liberal government that were taking place across Canada. They immediately set up camp and refused to leave.

The protest halted $600 million in trade per day and stopped essential workers from crossing the bridge, the commission has heard through other evidence.

The Liberal government decided to bring in emergency powers on Feb. 14, the same day the Ambassador Bridge reopened to traffic.

The legislation granted extraordinary powers to the government and police, including the ability to restrict protesters’ freedom of movement, freeze the bank accounts of some participants, and compel towing companies to help remove trucks and other vehicles from the protest sites.

The document shows that Trudeau pressed Ford on whether the Ontario Provincial Police, who Ford told him were going in, understood the urgency.

Ford said he shared the prime minister’s frustration and lamented that he could not direct the police.

At least in Windsor, he said, police had a plan. It was different in Ottawa, where by that point protesters had occupied the downtown streets near Parliament Hill for more than a week.

“They’ll act, but without directing them it’s hard to describe their game plan,” Ford said of the Ontario Provincial Police.

“This is critical, I hear you. I’ll be up their a– with a wire brush.”

The document was shown to Ontario Provincial Police Supt. Dana Earley, who testified before the commission Tuesday. She said she never experienced any political interference when she acted as critical incident commander during the bridge blockade.

The Public Order Emergency Commission, which is required under the Emergencies Act, has scheduled public hearings in Ottawa through Nov. 25.

At the heart of the matter is whether the emergency declaration and the powers under the act were necessary to clear the protests that clogged Ottawa’s downtown for weeks and inspired blockades elsewhere in the country, driven by opposition to COVID-19 measures.

Earley said she was told by senior OPP officers that the Windsor blockade was a priority and that she would be given the officers she needed to clear it.

Aside from the economic impact, she said the threat of counter-protests had her worried about a greater risk of violence.

In one case, the president of the autoworkers association told her he would come to the protest with 1,000 people to “crack heads” or bring heavy equipment to push protesters into the river.

At one point, she said, she briefly considered putting off an operation to clear the bridge, fearing it might make the ongoing occupation in downtown Ottawa worse.

Protesters in Ottawa had already been entrenched around Parliament Hill for weeks, with no end in sight, when police were ready to move on the protest blocking Canada’s busiest border crossing in Windsor.

Earley said that on Feb. 11, she had a plan and her officers were ready to go, but she worried a large police operation could make matters more difficult in the national capital.

Her strategic commanders convinced her to focus on what was best for Windsor.

“I changed my mind and decided to continue with my plan, realizing that I didn’t know the intimate knowledge of what was going on in Ottawa, because my focus had to be Windsor,” she said.

Two protesters involved in border blockades testified Tuesday at the commission.

Fort MacLeod, Alta., councillor Marco Van Huigenbos, who was charged with mischief for his role in the Alberta blockade, told the commission he was protesting to demand representatives from the government talk to him and others about pandemic mandates.

Paul Leschied attended the protests in Windsor, telling the commission he was aware of economic damage caused by border closures but had for two years been concerned about the economic impacts of pandemic-related mandates.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 8, 2022.

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COVID-19

Jordan Peterson explains why Canadians should pay attention to the National Citizens Inquiry.

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Most Canadians may be unaware that a Citizen-Led Inquiry into Canada’s COVID-19 Response is underway.  The first hearing which took place in Truro, Nova Scotia has already provided the five Inquiry Commissioners with hours of evidence to consider.

Hearings are also scheduled for Toronto, Winnipeg, Saskatoon, Red Deer, Vancouver, Quebec City, and finally Ottawa.  The second round of hearings starts Thursday, March 30 in Toronto.  On the eve of this, the National Citizens Inquiry has released a statement from renowned Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson.  Below in his message to the commissioners, Dr. Peterson outlines all the reasons this inquiry is so important.

From NationalCitizensInquiry.ca

A Citizen-Led Inquiry Into Canada’s COVID-19 Response

Canada’s federal and provincial governments’ COVID-19 policies were unprecedented. These interventions into Canadians’ lives, our families, businesses, and communities were, and to great extent remain, significant. In particular, these interventions impacted the physical and mental health, civil liberties and fundamental freedoms, jobs and livelihoods, and overall social and economic wellbeing of nearly all Canadians.

These circumstances demand a comprehensive, transparent, and objective national inquiry into the appropriateness and efficacy of these interventions, and to determine what lessons can be learned for the future. Such an inquiry cannot be commissioned or conducted impartially by our governments as it is their responses and actions to the COVID-19 which would be under investigation.

The National Citizen’s Inquiry (NCI) is a citizen-led and citizen-funded initiative that is completely independent from government. In early 2023, the NCI will hear from Canadians and experts and investigate governments’ COVID-19 policies in a fair and impartial manner.

The NCI’s purpose is to listen, to learn, and to recommend. What went right? What went wrong? How can Canadians and our governments better react to national crises in the future in a manner that balances the interests of all members of our society?


Canadian psychologist, Dr. Jordan B. Peterson who is also an author, online educator, and Professor Emeritus at the University of Toronto spoke out about the Canadian response to COVID-19.

Dr. Peterson’s prerecorded testimony was directed to the five Commissioners at the National Citizens Inquiry in Truro, Nova Scotia.

 

Toronto, Ontario

DETAILS

Start:     March 30 @ 9:00 am
End:      April 1 @ 5:00 pm

The National Citizen’s Inquiry Hearings Event in the city of Toronto, Ontario Canada.

This event takes place starting March 30th to April 1st 2023.
Hearings go from 9:00am – 5:00pm Eastern Time.

You can register to attend the event here.

The hearing schedule is here.

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Justice

Provincial police officer killed during attempted arrest northeast of Montreal

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LOUISEVILLE, Que. — A Quebec provincial police officer has been killed while trying to arrest a man at a home in the province’s Mauricie region Monday night.

The police force confirmed in a news release today the death of Sgt. Maureen Breau, an officer with more than 20 years of experience.

The 35-year-old male suspect was later shot and killed by other officers who arrived on the scene in Louiseville, Que., about 100 kilometres northeast of Montreal.

Quebec’s police watchdog, which is investigating, says Breau and another officer were arresting the man at about 8:30 p.m. for uttering threats when he grabbed a knife and stabbed Breau.

The watchdog, the Bureau des enquêtes indépendantes, says another pair of officers arrived shortly afterwards, and one of them fatally shot the suspect.

Police say another officer was injured during the intervention, but their life is not in danger.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 28, 2023.

The Canadian Press

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