A senator concerned about foreign interference in the Upper House is calling for Senate leaders to be granted access to an uncensored intelligence report that claims parliamentarians colluded with foreign actors.
The report, released by the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP) on June 3, said that some parliamentarians were “semi-witting or witting” participants in foreign interference efforts against Canada, though it did not disclose the names of those allegedly implicated.
Sen. Percy Downe addressed his colleagues in the Red Chamber on Nov. 21, noting that officials with security clearance who read the unredacted version of the report have offered conflicting statements about the existence of collusion.
“Absent from all these claims and counterclaims is any informed commentary from members of this chamber,” he said. “That is because, unlike their counterparts in the House of Commons, no leader of a recognized group in the Senate has been permitted to read the unredacted report.”
Downe noted that it had been nearly six months since the initial report was released, and said the fact that no leader in the Senate had been able to see the full report during that time was “nothing short of a disgrace.”
“The leaders of the groups in the Senate have a right to know what is in the full version of this report and, if required, a duty to act on what it contains,” he added, prompting cheers from his colleagues.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau testified at the foreign interference inquiry on Oct. 16 that he had “the names of a number of parliamentarians, former parliamentarians, and or candidates in the Conservative Party of Canada who are engaged or at high risk of, or for whom there is clear intelligence around foreign interference.” Under further questioning by counsel for the Conservatives, Trudeau added that he’s also aware of Liberal lawmakers, as well as those from other parties, who are implicated in foreign interference concerns.
Downe further pointed out the nuance in Trudeau’s statement, noting that the prime minister did not specify “members of the House of Commons,” but rather “parliamentarians,” which includes senators.
Earlier, during Senate question period on Nov. 21, Downe asked Sen. Marc Gold, the government representative in the Senate, whether any minister, political staffer, or federal government employee had informed him that senators were named in the unredacted NSICOP report.
“The answer is no, I haven’t heard any such matter,” Gold said.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has urged the Liberal government to disclose the names of the parliamentarians identified by NSICOP. Poilievre has opted not to obtain the required security clearance to read the report himself, saying it would effectively hamstring him from talking about the contents of the report.






















