Heads will roll ... just watch me
Via Rail - Business Development Bank of Canada - Canada Post - RCMP among Crown agencies in Martin's line of fire
Anne Dawson
CanWest News Service
Friday, February 13, 2004
Prime Minister Paul Martin said Thursday he believes "political direction" was given to the small group of rogue civil servants who perpetrated the $250-million Quebec sponsorship scandal and vowed "heads will roll" at the Crown corporations which he said were also "accomplices" in the scam.
"I do know that clearly there . . . had to be political direction," Martin told a news conference. "It's a small group of people and the auditor general talked about the 12 or so people who worked for Public Works, but there certainly has been other people in Crown corporations who were accomplices, and at the same time, it is impossible to believe there was no political direction."
Martin said he will leave it to the public inquiry to find out which Crown corporation officials were complicit in the scam cited in auditor general Sheila Fraser's report, but he left no doubt he intends to make those people pay.
"To quote another prime minister, 'You just watch me,' " he said.
Fraser revealed that five Crown corporations -- Via Rail, the Old Port of Montreal, the Business Development Bank of Canada, Canada Post and even the RCMP -- were involved in funnelling $100 million to Liberal-friendly ad firms in Quebec to pay for work that was incomplete or did not benefit Canadians.
Martin praised his predecessor Jean Chretien as a "man of great integrity" but declined to speculate what he knew about the sponsorship scam, saying that would be up to the inquiry to discover. He said he takes "personal responsibility" for the sponsorship mess and is prepared to testify, but it would be up to Chretien to decide if he would testify if asked.
"I'm not going to speculate. I happen to believe that the former prime minister is a man of character, is a man of integrity and he's made a great contribution to the country," said Martin.
He also said any ministers who knew about the scandal and did not act to stop it should resign, and he demanded anyone with information to come forward. He also suggested a "few" Quebec cabinet ministers may have known more about the real dealings behind the sponsorship scandal than he did.
Martin dismissed a CanWest News story on Thursday that quoted his senior advisers laying the blame for the scandal at Chretien's door.
However, a senior Martin adviser repeated similar allegations to CanWest again Thursday, saying that although they do not believe Chretien knew about the millions of dollars worth of fake invoices and the huge commissions paid out for little or no work, they believe he initiated the "culture" that allowed the culprits to do whatever was necessary to address the Quebec post-referendum crisis.
While Martin was on the defensive, auditor general Sheila Fraser testified before a Commons committee that Parliament was misled and misinformed about what was going on in connection with the government's $250 million sponsorship program.
"The role of Parliament was not respected," Fraser told the public accounts committee. "It was either not informed or misinformed about the management of this program."
Many of the questions Fraser faced were designed to tie political players to the scandal and determine just where the money went.
Fraser also faced questions about her own office and why it hadn't caught the sponsorship scandal earlier.
However, Fraser said her office can only audit a fraction of the government's transactions, chosen on the basis of risk.
Via Rail - Business Development Bank of Canada - Canada Post - RCMP among Crown agencies in Martin's line of fire
Anne Dawson
CanWest News Service
Friday, February 13, 2004
Prime Minister Paul Martin said Thursday he believes "political direction" was given to the small group of rogue civil servants who perpetrated the $250-million Quebec sponsorship scandal and vowed "heads will roll" at the Crown corporations which he said were also "accomplices" in the scam.
"I do know that clearly there . . . had to be political direction," Martin told a news conference. "It's a small group of people and the auditor general talked about the 12 or so people who worked for Public Works, but there certainly has been other people in Crown corporations who were accomplices, and at the same time, it is impossible to believe there was no political direction."
Martin said he will leave it to the public inquiry to find out which Crown corporation officials were complicit in the scam cited in auditor general Sheila Fraser's report, but he left no doubt he intends to make those people pay.
"To quote another prime minister, 'You just watch me,' " he said.
Fraser revealed that five Crown corporations -- Via Rail, the Old Port of Montreal, the Business Development Bank of Canada, Canada Post and even the RCMP -- were involved in funnelling $100 million to Liberal-friendly ad firms in Quebec to pay for work that was incomplete or did not benefit Canadians.
Martin praised his predecessor Jean Chretien as a "man of great integrity" but declined to speculate what he knew about the sponsorship scam, saying that would be up to the inquiry to discover. He said he takes "personal responsibility" for the sponsorship mess and is prepared to testify, but it would be up to Chretien to decide if he would testify if asked.
"I'm not going to speculate. I happen to believe that the former prime minister is a man of character, is a man of integrity and he's made a great contribution to the country," said Martin.
He also said any ministers who knew about the scandal and did not act to stop it should resign, and he demanded anyone with information to come forward. He also suggested a "few" Quebec cabinet ministers may have known more about the real dealings behind the sponsorship scandal than he did.
Martin dismissed a CanWest News story on Thursday that quoted his senior advisers laying the blame for the scandal at Chretien's door.
However, a senior Martin adviser repeated similar allegations to CanWest again Thursday, saying that although they do not believe Chretien knew about the millions of dollars worth of fake invoices and the huge commissions paid out for little or no work, they believe he initiated the "culture" that allowed the culprits to do whatever was necessary to address the Quebec post-referendum crisis.
While Martin was on the defensive, auditor general Sheila Fraser testified before a Commons committee that Parliament was misled and misinformed about what was going on in connection with the government's $250 million sponsorship program.
"The role of Parliament was not respected," Fraser told the public accounts committee. "It was either not informed or misinformed about the management of this program."
Many of the questions Fraser faced were designed to tie political players to the scandal and determine just where the money went.
Fraser also faced questions about her own office and why it hadn't caught the sponsorship scandal earlier.
However, Fraser said her office can only audit a fraction of the government's transactions, chosen on the basis of risk.

As much as I don't like the Liberals, Paul Martin seems like a good guy.

Chretien is still scum, obviously.
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