For Your
Information
Jody
Wilson-Raybould's Testimony at Justice
Committee -- Opening Statement
Gilakas'la. Thank you Mr. Chair and thank you to the
members of the Justice Committee for providing me with the opportunity
for extended testimony today. I very much appreciate it. And
starting off, I would like to acknowledge the territory, the ancestral
lands of the Algonquin people.
For a period of
approximately four months between September and December 2018, I
experienced a consistent and sustained effort by many people within the
government to seek to politically interfere in the exercise of
prosecutorial discretion in my role as the Attorney General of Canada
in an inappropriate effort to secure a Deferred Prosecution Agreement
[DPA] with SNC-Lavalin. These events involved 11 people (excluding
myself and my political staff) from the Prime Minister's Office, the
Privy Council Office, and the Office of the Minister of Finance. This
included in-person conversations, telephone calls, emails, and text
messages. There were approximately 10 phone calls and 10 meetings
specifically about SNC and I or a part of my staff were a part of these
meetings.
Within these conversations, there were express statements regarding the
necessity of interference in the SNC-Lavalin matter, the potential for
consequences, and veiled threats if a DPA was not made available to
SNC. These conversations culminated on December 19, 2018 with a
conversation I had with the Clerk of the Privy Council -- a
conversation that I will provide some significant detail on.
A few weeks later, on January 7, 2019, I was informed by the Prime
Minister that I was being shuffled out of the role of Minister of
Justice and Attorney General of Canada.
For most of these conversations, I made contemporaneous notes, detailed
notes, in addition to my clear memory, which I am relying on today
among other documentation.
My goal in my testimony is to outline the details of
these communications for the Committee and indeed all Canadians.
However, before doing that, let me make a couple of comments.
First, I want to thank Canadians for their patience
since the February 7 story which broke in the Globe and Mail. Thank you as well
especially to those who have reached out to me from across the country.
I appreciate the messages and I have read them all.
Secondly, on the role of the Attorney General. The Attorney
General exercises prosecutorial discretion as provided for under the Director of Public Prosecutions Act.
Generally,
this
authority
is
exercised
by
the
Director
of
Public
Prosecutions,
but
the
Attorney
General
has authority to issue
directives to the DPP on specific prosecutions or to take over
prosecutions.
It is well-established that the Attorney General exercises
prosecutorial discretion. She or he does so individually and
independently. These are not Cabinet decisions.
I will say that it is appropriate for Cabinet colleagues to draw to the
Attorney General's attention what they see as important policy
considerations that are relevant to decisions about how a prosecution
will proceed. What is not appropriate is pressing the Attorney General
on matters that she or he cannot take into account, such as partisan
political considerations; continuing to urge the Attorney General to
change her or his mind for months after the decision has been made; or
suggesting that a collision with the Prime Minister on these matters
should be avoided.
With that said, the remainder of my testimony will be a detailed and
factual delineation of the approximately 10 phone calls, 10 in-person
meetings, and emails and text messages that were part of an effort to
politically interfere regarding the SNC matter for the purposes of
securing a Deferred Prosecution.
The story begins on September 4, 2018. My COS [Chief of Staff] and I
were overseas when I was sent a 'Memorandum for the Attorney General
(pursuant to section 13 of the Director
of
Public
Prosecutions
Act) which was entitled 'Whether to issue
an invitation to negotiate a remediation agreement to SNC Lavalin'
which was prepared by the Director of Public Prosecutions, Kathleen
Roussel. The only parts of this note that I will disclose are as
follows: "the DPP is of the view that an invitation to negotiate will
not be made in this case and that no announcement will be made by the
PPSC [Public Prosecution Service of Canada]." As with all section 13
notices -- the Director provides the information so that the Attorney
General may take such course of action as they deem appropriate.
In other words, the Director had made her decision to not negotiate a
remediation agreement with SNC-Lavalin.
I subsequently spoke to my Minister's office staff about
this decision and I did the standard practice of undertaking further
internal work and due diligence in relation to this note, a practice
that I have had for many of the section 13 notices that I received when
I was the Attorney General. In other words, I immediately put in
motion, with my Department and Minister's office, a careful
consideration and study of the matter.
Two days later, on September 6, one of the first communications
about the DPA was received from outside of my department. Ben Chin,
Minister Morneau's Chief of Staff, e-mailed my Chief of Staff and they
arranged to talk. He wanted to talk about SNC and what we could do, if
anything, to address this. He said to her, my Chief, that if they don't
get a DPA, they will leave Montreal, and it's the Quebec election right
now, so we can't have that happen. He said that they have a big meeting
coming up on Tuesday and that this bad news may go public.
This same day my Chief of Staff exchanged some emails with my MO Staff
[Francois Giroux and Emma Carver] about this, who advised her that the
Deputy Attorney General -- Nathalie Drouin -- was working on something
(they had spoken to her about the issue), and that my staff [Emma
Carver and Gregoire Webber] were drafting a memo as well on the role of
the AG vis à vis the
PPSC.
It was on or about this day that I requested a one-on-one meeting with
the Prime Minister on another matter of urgency and as soon as
possible after I got back into the country. This request would
ultimately become the meeting on September 17 between myself and
the Prime Minister that has widely been reported in the media.
On September 7, my Chief of Staff spoke by phone with my then Deputy
Minister about the call she had received from Ben Chin and the Deputy
stated that the Department was working on this. The Deputy gave my
Chief a quick rundown of what she thought some options might be (e.g.,
informally call Kathleen Roussel, set up an external review of their
decision, etc.). On the same day I received a note from my staff -- on
the role of the AG -- a note that was also shared with Elder Marques
and Amy Archer at the PMO.
Same day, staff in my office met with the Deputy Minister. Some
excerpts of the section 13 note were read to the Deputy Minister, but
the Deputy Minister did not want to be provided with a copy of the
section 13 note.
September 8 -- my Deputy shared a draft note on the role of the AG with
my Chief of Staff who shared it with me, and over the next day clarity
was sought by my staff with the Deputy on aspects of an option that was
in her note.
A follow-up conversation between Ben Chin and a member of my staff (FG)
occurred on September 11, Mr. Chin said that SNC has been informed by
the PPSC that it cannot enter into a DPA -- and Ben again detailed the
reasons why they were told they were not getting a DPA. Mr. Chin also
noted that SNC's legal counsel was Frank Iacobucci, and further
detailed what the terms were that SNC was prepared to agree to --
stating that they viewed this as a negotiation.
To be clear, up to this point I had not been directly
contacted by the Prime Minister, officials in the Prime Minister's
Office or the Privy Council Office about this matter. With the
exception of Mr. Chin's discussions, the focus of communications had
been internal to the Department of Justice.
This changes on September 16. My Chief of Staff had a phone call with
Mathieu Bouchard and Elder Marques from the Prime Minister's Office.
They wanted to discuss SNC. They told her that SNC have made further
submissions to the Crown, and that "there is some softening, but not
much." They said that they understood that the individual Crown
prosecutor wants to negotiate an agreement but the Director does not.
They said that they understand that there are limits on what can be
done, and that they can't direct, but that they hear that our Deputy
(of Justice) thinks we can get the PPSC to say "we think we should get
some outside advice on this." They said that they think we should be
able to find "a more reasonable resolution" here. They told her that
SNC's next board meeting is on Thursday, which was September 20. They
also mentioned the Quebec election context. They asked my Chief if
someone had suggested the outside advice idea to the PPSC, and asked
whether or not we were open to this suggestion. They wanted to know if
my Deputy could do it.
In response, my Chief of Staff stressed to them prosecutorial
independence and potential concerns about interference in the
independence of the prosecutorial functions. Mr. Bouchard and Mr.
Marques kept telling her that they didn't want to cross any lines --
but they asked my Chief of Staff to follow up with me directly on this
matter.
To be clear, I was fully aware of the conversations between September 4
and 16 that I have outlined. I had been regularly briefed by my staff
from the moment this matter first arose and had also reviewed all
materials that had been produced.
Further, my view had also formed at this point through the work of my
Department, my Minister's office and work I had conducted on my own,
that it was inappropriate for me to intervene in the decision of the
Director of Public Prosecutions in this case and pursue a Deferred
Prosecution Agreement.
In the course of reaching this view, I discussed the matter on a number
of occasions with my then Deputy so that she was aware of my view,
raised concerns on a number of occasions with my Deputy Minister about
the appropriateness of communications we were receiving from outside
the Department, and also raised concerns about some of the options she
had been suggesting.
On September 17 the Deputy Minister said that Finance had told her
that they want to make sure that Kathleen "understands the impact" if
we do nothing in this case. Given the many potential concerns raised by
this conversation, I discussed this later with my Deputy.
This same day, (September 17), I had my one-on-one with the Prime
Minister that I requested a couple weeks ago. When I walked in, the
Clerk of the Privy Council was in attendance as well.
While the meeting was not about the issue of SNC and DPA's, the Prime
Minister raised the issue immediately.
The Prime Minister asked me to help out, to find a solution here for
SNC -- citing that if there was no DPA, there would be many jobs lost
and that SNC will move from Montreal.
In response, I explained to him the law and what I have the ability to
do and not do under the Director of
Public Prosecutions Act around issuing directives or assuming
conduct of prosecutions. I told him that I had done my due diligence
and made up my mind on SNC and that I was not going to interfere with
the decision of the Director.
In response, the Prime Minister reiterated his concerns. I then
explained how this came about and that I had received the section 13
note from the DPP earlier in September and that I had considered the
matter very closely. I further stated that I was very clear on my role
as the AG -- and I am not prepared to issue a directive in this case --
that it was not appropriate.
The Prime Minister again cited potential loss of jobs and SNC moving.
Then to my surprise -- the Clerk started to make the case for the need
to have a DPA -- he said, "there is a board meeting on Thursday,
September 20, with stock holders" ... "they will likely be moving to
London if this happens ... and there is an election in Quebec soon"...
At that point, the Prime Minister jumped in, stressing that there is an
election in Quebec and that "I am an MP in Quebec -- the member for
Papineau."
I was quite taken aback. My response -- and I remember this vividly --
was to ask the PM a direct question while looking him in the eye -- I
asked: "Are you politically interfering with my role / my decision as
the AG? I would strongly advise against it."
The Prime Minister said "No, No, No -- we just need to
find a solution." The Clerk then said that he spoke to my Deputy and
she said that I could speak to the Director.
I responded by saying no I would not -- that would be inappropriate. I
further explained to the Clerk and the Prime Minister that I had a
conversation with my Deputy about options and what my position was on
the matter.
As a result, I agreed to and undertook to the Prime Minister that I
would have a conversation with my Deputy and the Clerk -- but that
these conversations would not change my mind. I also said that my staff
and my officials are not authorized to speak to the PPSC.
And then we finally discussed the issue that I had asked for the
meeting in the first place.
I left the meeting and immediately debriefed with my staff as to what
was said about SNC and DPA's.
On September 19, I met with the Clerk as I had undertaken to the Prime
Minister. The meeting was one-on-one, in my office.
The Clerk brought up job losses and that this is not
about the Quebec election or the Prime Minister being a Montreal MP. He
said that he has not seen the section 13 note. The Clerk said that he
understands that SNC is going back and forth with the DPP, and that
they want more information. He said that "Iacobucci is not a shrinking
violet." He referenced the September 20 date [presumably a reference to
the shareholder meeting], and that they don't have anything from the
DPP. He said that the Prime Minister is very concerned about the
confines of my role as Attorney General and the Director of Public
Prosecutions. He reported that the Prime Minister is very aware of my
role as the Attorney General of Canada.
I told the Clerk again that I had instructed that my Deputy is not to
get in touch with the Director and that, given my review of the matter,
I would not speak to her directly regarding a DPA. I offered to the
Clerk that, if SNC were to send a letter to me expressing their
concerns -- their public interest argument -- it would be permissible
and I would appropriately forward it directly to the Director of Public
Prosecutions.
Later that day, my Chief of Staff had a phone call with Elder Marques
and Mathieu Bouchard from the Prime Minister's Office. They wanted an
update on what was going on regarding the DPA's since "we don't have a
ton of time." She relayed my summary of my meeting with the Clerk and
the Prime Minister.
Mathieu and Elder raised the idea of an "informal reach out" to the
DPP. My Chief of Staff said that she knew I was not comfortable with
that, as it looked like and probably did constitute political
interference. They asked whether that was true if it wasn't the
Attorney General herself but if it was her staff or the Deputy
Minister. My Chief of Staff said "yes" it would and offered a call
directly with me. They said that "we will regroup and get back to you
on that."
Still on September 19, I spoke to Minister Morneau on this matter
when we were in the House. He again stressed the need to save jobs, and
I told him that engagements from his office to mine on SNC had to stop
-- that they were inappropriate.
They did not stop. On September 20, my Chief of Staff had phone
calls with Mr. Chin and Justin To, both from the Minister of Finance's
office, about DPAs and SNC.
At this point, after September 20, there was an apparent pause in
communicating with myself or my Chief of Staff about the SNC matter. We
did not hear from anyone again until October 18, when Mathieu Bouchard
called my Chief of Staff and asked that we -- I -- look at the option
of my seeking an external legal opinion on the DPP's decision not to
extend an invitation to negotiate a DPA.
This would become a recurring theme for sometime in messages from the
PMO -- that an external review should be done of the DPP's decision.
The next day as well, SNC filed a Federal Court application seeking to
quash the DPP's decision to not enter into a remediation agreement with
them.
In my view, this necessarily put to rest any notion that I might speak
to or intervene with the DPP or that an external review could take
place. The matter was now before the courts, and a judge was being
asked to look at the DPP's discretion.
However, on October 26, 2018 -- when my Chief of Staff spoke to Mathieu
Bouchard and communicated to him now that, given that SNC had now filed
in Federal Court seeking to review the DPP's decision, surely we had
moved past this idea of the Attorney General intervening or getting an
opinion on that same question -- Mathieu replied that he was
still interested in an external legal opinion idea. Could she not get
an external legal opinion on whether the DPP had exercised their
discretion properly, and then on the application itself, the Attorney
General could intervene and seek a stay of proceedings, given that she
was awaiting a legal opinion.
My Chief of Staff said that this would obviously be perceived as
interference and that her boss questioning the DPP's decision. Mathieu
said that if -- six months from the election -- SNC announces they are
moving their headquarters out of Canada, that is bad.
He said, "we can have the best policy in the world but we need to get
re-elected." He said that everybody knows that this is the Attorney
General's decision, but that he wants to make sure that all options are
being canvassed. Mathieu said that if, at the end of the day, the
Attorney General is not comfortable, that is fine. He just "doesn't
want any doors to be closed." Jessica, my Chief of Staff, said that I
was always happy to speak to him directly should he wish.
In mid-November, the PMO requested that I meet with Mathieu Bouchard
and Elder Marques to discuss the matter -- which I did on November 22.
This meeting was quite long -- I would say about an hour and a half. I
was irritated by having to have this meeting as I had already told PM
etc. that a DPA on SNC was not going to happen, that I was not going to
issue a directive.
Mathieu at this meeting did most of the talking -- he was trying to
tell me that there were options and that I needed to find a
solution.
I took them through the DPP Act, section 15, section 10,
and talked about prosecutorial independence as a constitutional
principle, and that they were interfering. I talked about the section
13 note -- which they said they had never received -- but I reminded
them that we sent it to them in September.
Mathieu and Elder continued to plead their case, talking about if I am
not sure in my decision, that we could hire an eminent person to advise
me. They were "kicking the tires." I said No. My mind had been made up
and they needed to stop. This was enough.
I will briefly pause at this moment to comment at this point on my own
state of mind. In my role as Attorney General, I had received the
decision of the DPP in September, had reviewed the matter, made a
decision on what was appropriate given a DPA, and communicated that to
the Prime Minister. I had also taken additional steps that the Prime
Minister asked me to -- such as meeting with Clerk.
In my view, the communications and efforts to change my mind on this
matter should have stopped. Various officials also urged me to take
partisan political considerations into account -- which it was clearly
improper for me to do. We either have a system that is based on the
rule of law, the independence of the prosecutorial functions, and
respect for those charged to use their discretion and powers in
particular ways -- or we do not. While in our system of government,
policy-oriented discussion amongst people at earlier points in this
conversation may be appropriate, the consistent and enduring efforts,
even in the face of judicial proceedings on the same matter -- and in
the face of a clear decision of the Director of Public Prosecutions and
the Attorney General -- to continue and even intensify such efforts
raises serious red flags in my view.
Yet, this is what continued to happen.
On December 5, 2018, I met with Gerry Butts. We had both sought out
the meeting.
I wanted to speak about a number of things -- including
bringing up SNC and the barrage of people hounding me and my staff.
Towards the end of the meeting, which was in the Chateau Laurier, I
raised how I needed everyone to stop talking to me about SNC as I had
made up my mind and the engagements were inappropriate. Gerry then took
over the conversation and said we need a solution on the SNC stuff --
he said I needed to find a solution. I said no and referenced the
preliminary inquiry and the judicial review. I said further that I gave
the Clerk the only appropriate solution that could have happened and
that was the letter idea that was not taken up.
Gerry said that the statute was a statute passed by
Harper and that he does not like the law [Director of Public Prosecutions Act].
I
said
something
like
"that
is
the
law
we
have"...
On December 7, I received a letter from the Prime Minister, dated
December 6, attaching a letter from the CEO of SNC-Lavalin dated
October 15. I responded to the Prime Minister's letter on December
6, noting that the matter is before the courts, so I cannot comment on
it, and that the decision re a DPA was one for the DPP, which is
independent of my office.
This brings us to the final events in the chronology, and ones which
signal, in my experience, the final escalation in efforts by the Prime
Minister's Office to interfere in this matter.
On December 18, 2018, my Chief of Staff was urgently summoned to
meet with Gerry Butts and Katie Telford to discuss SNC. They wanted to
know where I am in terms of finding a solution. They told her that they
felt like the issue was getting worse and that I was not doing
anything. They referenced a possible call with the Prime Minister and
the Clerk the next day.
I will now read to you a transcript of the most relevant sections of
the text conversation between my Chief of Staff and I almost
immediately after that meeting:
Jessica: Basically, they
want a solution. Nothing new. They want external counsel retained to
give you an opinion on whether you can review the DPP's decision here
and whether you should in this case. ... I told them that would be
interference.
Gerry said "Jess,
there is no solution here that doesn't involve some interference." At
least they are finally being honest about what they are asking you to
do! Don't care about the PPSC's independence. Katie was like "we don't
want to debate legalities anymore." ... They keep being like "we aren't
lawyers, but there has to be some solution here."
MOJAG: So where were
things left?
JP: So unclear. I said I
would of course let you know about the conversation and they said they
were going to "kick the tires" with a few more people on this tonight.
The Clerk was waiting outside when I left. But they said they want to
set up a call between you and the Prime Minister and the Clerk
tomorrow. I said that of course you would be happy to speak to your
boss! They seem quite keen on the idea of you retaining an ex Supreme
Court of Canada judge to get advice on this. Katie Telford thinks it
gives us cover in the business community and the legal community, and
that it would allow the Prime Minister to say we are doing something.
She was like "if Jody is nervous, we would of course line up all kinds
of people to write OpEds saying that what she is doing is proper."
On December 19, 2018, I was asked to have a call with the Clerk. It was
a fairly lengthy call and I took the call from home and I was on my own
by myself. Given what had occurred the previous day with my Chief of
Staff, I was determined to end all interference and conversations about
this matter once and for all. Here is part of what the Clerk and I
discussed.
The Clerk said he was calling about Deferred Prosecution Agreement /
SNC -- he said he wanted to pass on where the Prime Minister is at ...
he spoke about the company's board and the possibility of them selling
out to somebody else, moving their headquarters, and job losses.
He said that the Prime Minister wants to be able to say
that he has tried everything he can within the legitimate toolbox. The
Clerk said that the PM is quite determined, quite firm, but he wants to
know why the DPA route which Parliament provided for isn't being used.
He said "I think he is gonna find a way to get it done one way or
another. So, he is in that kind of mood and I wanted you to be aware of
it."
The Clerk said he didn't know if the Prime Minister was planning on
calling me directly or he is thinking about getting somebody else to
give him some advice. You know he does not want to do anything outside
the box of what is legal or proper. He said that the Prime Minister
wants to understand more, to give him advice on this or to give you
advice on this if you want to feel more comfortable you are not doing
anything inappropriate or outside the frame.
I told the Clerk that I was 100 per cent confident that I was doing
nothing inappropriate. I, again, reiterated my confidence in where I am
at and my views on SNC and the DPA have not changed, I reiterate
this is a constitutional principle of prosecutorial independence.
I warned the Clerk in this call that we were treading on dangerous
ground here -- and I issued a stern warning because, as the Attorney
General, I cannot act in a manner and the prosecution cannot act in a
manner that is not objective, that isn't independent, I cannot act in a
partisan way and I cannot be politically motivated. This all screams of
that. The Clerk wondered whether anyone could speak to the Director
about the context around this or get her to explain her reasonings.
The Clerk told me that he was going to have to report back to the Prime
Minister before he leaves. He said again that the Prime Minister
was in a pretty firm frame of mind about this and that he was a bit
worried.
I asked what he was worried about.
The Clerk then made a comment about how it is not good
for the Prime Minister and his Attorney General to be at "loggerheads."
I told the Clerk that I was giving him my best advice
and if he does not accept that advice then it is the Prime Minister's
prerogative to do what he wants, but I am trying to protect the Prime
Minister from political interference or perceived political
interference or otherwise.
The Clerk acknowledged that, but said that the Prime
Minister does not have the power to do what he wants. All the tools are
in my hands, he said.
I said that I was having thoughts of the Saturday Night
Massacre -- but that I was confident that I had given the Prime
Minister my best advice to protect him and to protect the
constitutional principle of prosecutorial independence.
The Clerk said that he was worried about a collision
because the Prime Minister is pretty firm about this. He told me that
he had seen the Prime Minister a few hours ago and that this is really
important to him.
That is essentially where the conversation ended and I
did not hear from the Prime Minister the next day.
On January 7, I received a call from the Prime Minister and was
informed I was being shuffled out of my role as Minister of Justice and
Attorney General of Canada. I will not go into details of this
call, or subsequent communications about the shuffle, but I will say
that I stated I believed the reason was because of the SNC matter. They
denied this to be the case.
On January 11, 2019, the Friday before the shuffle, my Deputy Minister
is called by the Clerk and told that the shuffle is happening, and that
she will be getting a new Minister. As part of this conversation, the
Clerk tells the Deputy that one of the first conversations that the new
Minister will be expected to have with the Prime Minister will be on
SNC-Lavalin. In other words, that the new Minister will need to be
prepared to speak to the Prime Minister on this file. The Deputy
recounts this to my Chief of Staff who tells me about the comment.
My narrative stops here. I must reiterate to the Committee my concern
outlined in my letter to the Chair yesterday. That is, Order in Council
#2019-0105 addresses only my time as the Attorney General of Canada and
therefore does nothing to release me from my restrictions that apply to
communications while I proudly served as the Minister of Veterans
Affairs and in relation to my resignation from that post, or my
presentation to Cabinet after I resigned. This time period includes
communications on topics that some members of the Committee have
explored with other witnesses and about which there have been public
statements by others. The Order in Council leaves in place the various
constraints, in particular Cabinet confidence, that there are on my
ability to speak freely about matters that occurred after I left the
post of Attorney General.
Even with those constraints, I hope that through my narrative today,
the Committee, and everyone across the country who's listening, has a
clear idea of what I experienced and what I know of who did what, and
what was communicated.
I hope, and expect, the facts speak for
themselves.
I imagine Canadians now fully understand that in my view
these events constituted pressure to intervene in a matter, and that
this pressure -- or political interference -- to intervene, was not
appropriate. However, Canadians can judge this for themselves as we all
now have the same frame of information.
Lastly, as I have said previously, "it has always been my view that the
Attorney General of Canada must be non-partisan, more transparent in
the principles that are the basis of decisions, and, in this respect,
always willing to speak truth to power." In saying this I was
reflecting what I understood to be the vital importance of the rule of
law and prosecutorial independence in our democracy. My understanding
of this has been shaped by some lived experiences. I am, of course, a
lawyer. I was a prosecutor in the downtown eastside of Vancouver. So I
come to this view as a professional trained and committed to certain
values as key to our system of order.
But my understanding of the rule of law has also been
shaped by my experiences as an Indigenous person and as an Indigenous
leader. The history of Crown-Indigenous relations in this country
includes a history of the rule of law not being respected. Indeed, one
of the main reasons for the urgent need for justice and reconciliation
today is that, in the history of our country, we have not always upheld
foundational values such as the rule of law in our relations to
Indigenous peoples. And I have seen the negative impacts for freedom,
equality, and a just society this can have firsthand.
So when I pledged to serve Canadians as your Minister of Justice and
Attorney General, I came to it with a deeply ingrained commitment to
the rule of law and the importance of acting independently of partisan,
political and narrow interests in all matters. When we do not do that,
I firmly believe, and know, we do worse as a society.
I will conclude by saying this: I was taught to always be careful
of what you say -- because you cannot take it back. I was taught to
always hold true to your core values and principles and to act with
integrity. These are the teachings of my parents, grandparents and
community. I come from a long line of matriarchs and I am a truth
teller in accordance with the laws and traditions of our Big House.
This is who I am and this is who I always will be.
Gilakas'la / Thank you.
This article was published in
Volume 49 Number 7 - March 2, 2019
Article Link:
For Your
Information: Jody
Wilson-Raybould's Testimony at Justice
Committee -- Opening Statement
Website: www.cpcml.ca
Email: editor@cpcml.ca
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