Mr. Chair, on April 10 of this year, The Globe and Mail reported that in 2019 the then Liberal candidate and now the member of Parliament for Don Valley North was tipped off by a Liberal Party member that he was being monitored by CSIS.
It was confirmed at the public inquiry on foreign interference that only a select few top Liberals, closely connected to the Prime Minister, were present at a classified CSIS briefing where this information was communicated. Three top Liberals received the briefing, including Azam Ishmael, the national director of the Liberal Party. Mr. Ishmael then briefed Jeremy Broadhurst, who did have the requisite security clearance, Broadhurst being a top adviser to the Prime Minister. Broadhurst then briefed the Prime Minister.
What we know is that five top Liberals, including the Prime Minister himself, were briefed. That information resulted in a leak in which a candidate, now a member of Parliament, was tipped off that he was being monitored by CSIS.
Can you confirm that knowingly leaking classified information is an offence under sections 13 and 14 of the Security of Information Act?