
MPs request emergency meeting on ‘troubling’ Chinese interference allegations
Global News
Global News reported on Monday that Canadian intelligence officials have warned Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that China has allegedly been targeting Canada.
Members of Parliament are requesting an emergency House of Commons committee meeting in light of what they call a “troubling” report first published by Global News that China has allegedly been targeting Canada with a vast campaign of foreign interference.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre announced the planned request on Wednesday during a press conference in Vancouver. The formal request was shared in a tweet by Conservative MP Michael Cooper, who is the shadow minister for democratic reform.
Cooper shared the letter sent to the chair of the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs on Wednesday, which was co-signed by NDP MP Rachel Blaney and Bloc Quebecois MP Marie-Hélène Gaudreau. Committees have five days to hold a meeting in response to a written request by at least four members.
The letter requests a meeting in public as soon as possible, but not on Remembrance Day on Nov. 11, to “determine how the Committee should respond” to the interference allegations in the report.
Global News reported on Monday that Canadian intelligence officials have warned Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that China has allegedly been targeting Canada with a vast campaign of foreign interference, which includes funding a clandestine network of at least 11 federal candidates running in the 2019 election, according to Global News sources.
Delivered to the prime minister and several cabinet members in a series of briefings and memos first presented in January, the allegations included other detailed examples of Beijing’s efforts to further its influence and, in turn, subvert Canada’s democratic process, sources said.
Based on recent information from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), those efforts allegedly involve payments through intermediaries to candidates affiliated with the Chinese Communist Party (CCP), placing agents into the offices of MPs in order to influence policy, seeking to co-opt and corrupt former Canadian officials to gain leverage in Ottawa, and mounting aggressive campaigns to punish Canadian politicians whom the People’s Republic of China (PRC) views as threats to its interests.













