
Email saying Tom Clark approved purchase of $9M apartment was wrong, GAC official tells MPs
CBC
An internal Global Affairs Canada email that suggested Canada's consul general in New York was directly involved in the purchase of a $9 million luxury apartment in the city was mistaken, a committee of MPs was told Thursday.
Emily Nicholson, a Global Affairs Canada (GAC) official, told MPs she wrote the June 17 email for the minister's office "primarily" to quickly summarize the process of selling the old official residence for the consul general, not the process of buying the new one.
That initial summary stated that consulate staff and Consul General Tom Clark were "instrumental throughout this process" and that Clark himself had provided "the greenlight for the selection of the new residence." Nicholson said her summary was mistaken and had confused several details.
"The term 'greenlight' was meant as a thumbs-up," Nicholson said. "It was just intended to communicate that the consul general was aware of and prepared to deal with the hassle of moving part way through his assignment."
Nicholson said she was summarizing information she was given by other GAC officials and she meant to say that while consulate staff were instrumental, Clark was only aware of the process.
"In hindsight, more precise language could have been used to prevent any misunderstanding. That clarification was provided on July 25," she said.
Since the purchase of the apartment became public in July, it has been criticized by Conservative MPs as overly lavish in light of the cost of living challenges facing Canadians.
Conservative MPs have repeatedly claimed the purchase was made to provide a perk to Clark — a veteran broadcaster the Conservatives have called Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's "media buddy" — and that he was involved in the selection of the new residence.
GAC officials previously told the committee Clark was not involved in the purchase or sale of the apartment. They also said the five bedroom apartment at 550 Park Avenue that had served as the official residence since 1961 had to be sold because it was no longer suitable.
Nicholson said Thursday that her initial email was drafted after a June 14 request from Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly's office. Nicholson said her initial email was only intended to provide a "quick" summary. She told MPs that after it was sent, the minister's office requested a more detailed summary of the process, which she delivered on July 25.
That summary, also written by Nicholson, contained a different description of Clark's role. It said he "did not direct this process" and that he was not "part of the selection or approval process for the overall process or the property purchase."
Opposition MPs on the committee did not accept Nicholson's version of events and suggested her second memo was an attempt at a cover-up.
Conservative MP Michael Barrett suggested the timing of the second memo, one day after the committee voted to conduct hearings on the purchase of the apartment, was suspicious.
"You'll have to elaborate, ma'am. The timeline is beyond curious," Barrett said.













