Trudeau's intelligence adviser backs use of Emergencies Act to clear Ottawa convoy protest - Action News
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Politics

Trudeau's intelligence adviser backs use of Emergencies Act to clear Ottawa convoy protest

The prime minister's national security and intelligence advisersaid Thursday the government was right to invoke the Emergencies Act to clear out the anti-vaccine mandate protest that took over downtown Ottawa last month because the protesters were"dug in" and "there's no doubt [they] came to overthrow the government."

'Domestic ideologically motivated extremism is here and it's here to stay' Jody Thomas

Canadian police officers stand guard as trucks and demonstrators continue to occupy Ottawa's downtown core on February 19, 2022. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

The prime minister's national security and intelligence advisersaid Thursday the government was right to invoke the Emergencies Act to clear out the anti-vaccine mandate protest that took over downtown Ottawa last month because the protesters were"dug in" and "there's no doubt [they] came to overthrow the government."

"Whether their ability to do that was there, whether their understanding of how to do that was realistic, is actually irrelevant to what they wanted to do," Jody Thomas said."I think we have to think about it from that lens."

Thomas, the formerdeputy minister of national defence,became one of Justin Trudeau's top advisers almost two months ago.

Speaking at the Ottawa Conference on Security and Defence Thursday, Thomas said the Emergency Act is meant forextreme situations and the so-called 'freedom convoy' met that bar.

The law gave the federal government temporary powers to "galvanize law enforcement, security agencies and financial measures in a way that we would have not otherwise been able to do," she said.

She said the protesters' blockade of the Ambassador Bridgein Windsor was resolved just as the Emergency Act was coming into play, but the occupation of downtown Ottawa "was in and of itself enough" to invoke it.

"The occupation of Ottawa was dug in, they had supply chains, they had organization, they had funding coming in from across Canada, but also other countries," she said.

Jody Thomas is Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's national security adviser. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Thomas told the audience that it's an "oversimplification" to describethe convoyoccupation as a "protest."

"I think domestic ideologically motivated extremism is here and it's here to stay," said Thomas.

"We have lived in the splendid, naive superiority that this was not our problem in Canada. That this was a south-of-the-border problem, that it existed in other countries, but not in Canada and that's simply not true. I am concerned about it."

Thomas said the government has "a lot to unpack" in order to understand the problem and address it.

She said 26 Canadians have been killed and 40 injured since 2016 by ideologically motivated violence.

One organizer demanded government leaders' resignations

National security expert Wesley Wark said anyone watching the movement could conclude there were anti-government elements in its ranks whomay or may not have had a practical plan to overthrow the government.

Some of those supporting the convoysigned a "memorandum of understanding" (MOU) issued by Canada Unity, one of theconvoyorganizers. The document called on governments at all levels to do away with"unconstitutional, discriminatory and segregating actions and human rights violations" brought about through vaccine requirements and passport systems.

The MOU also demanded that government leaders "resign their lawful positions of authority immediately" so that protesters could somehow form a new government with the Governor General and the Senate of Canada.

Canada Unity's website claimed that the MOU had 250,000 signatures before it was taken down.CBC News has not verified that claim and the website accepting signatures is no longer online.

Wark said it's important to note that, as ittriggeredthe Emergencies Act, the government stated that it was taking this step to addressarisk of serious violence to peopleand property in Canada. He said thegovernment could have included the threat to overthrow the government in that statement,butdidn't.

convoy protesters yell
Police enforce an injunction against protesters in Ottawa on Feb. 19, 2022. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

He added that whilea global movement has embraced anti-government rhetoric,it's hard to determine how much traction it's had in Canada.

He said it's an "exaggeration" to suggest there's a strong undercurrent in Canada of people embracing ideologically motivated violent extremism.

"I think it can become a self-fulfilling prophecy if we turn all the government's security apparatus and attention to that problem, which I think frankly is dwarfed by many other national security problems we have here," said Wark.

The Conservatives'criticfor public safety, Raquel Dancho, has called the government's use of the Emergencies Act a "massive overreach" of federal power that wasn't justified bythe blockades.

"Today's admission by the prime minister's own national security adviser proves the incredibly high threshold needed to justify invocation of the Emergencies Act was never met when they stated the freedom convoy neither had the 'ability' nor the 'understanding' of how to become a credible threat to our public safety or democracy," said Dancho in a statement to CBC News.

The government is to hold an inquiry into the use of the Emergencies Act within 60 days of its revocation and table a report to Parliament within 360 days.

With files from Peter Zimonjic