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Top Mountie, PM's intelligence adviser testifying this week before Emergencies Act inquiry
CBC
The head of the RCMP and the prime minister's national security and intelligence adviser will testify before the Emergencies Act inquiry this week.
The Public Order Emergency Commission was established to determine if the federal government was justified in its decision to, for the first time ever, invoke the Emergencies Act — which it used to give police extraordinary powers to break up last winter's protests against pandemic restrictions.
So far, the commission has heard from the Ottawa Police Service, the Ontario Provincial Police, municipal and provincial officials and some of the protest organizers themselves.
This week, the commission will start to hear from federal officials.
On Monday, the commission will hear from two civil servants who had top roles in the federal Department of Public Safety during last winter's convoy protest, which gridlocked parts of downtown Ottawa for nearly three weeks.
Rob Stewart was the deputy minister while Dominic Rochon was senior assistant deputy minister of the department's national security and cyber security sector.
They'll be followed by Cindy Termorshuizen, assistant deputy minister at Global Affairs Canada, and Joe Comartin, former Canadian consul general in Detroit, who are expected to reflect on how the protests affected Canada's international relationships.
Outside of Ottawa, protesters against COVID-19 restrictions also blocked access to the border crossing in Coutts, Alta. and tied up the Ambassador Bridge, both vital commercial routes between Canada and the U.S.
Later in the week, the commission will hear from RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki and other Mounties.
Some of Lucki's texts with her Ontario Provincial Police counterpart have been presented to the commission already.
She wrote that the federal government was already losing confidence in the Ottawa police just one week into the protests.
"Between you and I only, (Government of Canada) is losing (or) lost confidence in OPS, we gotta get to safe action (or) enforcement," Lucki texted OPP Commissioner Thomas Carrique.
"'Cause if they go the Emergency Measures Act, you or (I) may be brought into lead, not something I want."
Deputy Commissioner Curtis Zablocki (the top Mountie in Alberta), the RCMP's head of federal policing Michael Duheme and former head of the Canada Border Services Agency John Ossowski are also on the witness list.
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Here's where and when you can vote in advance polls in Waterloo region, Guelph and Wellington County
Voting day is Feb. 27 in the Ontario election, but people can cast their ballots this week in advance polls.