Evidence of meeting #107 for Public Safety and National Security in the 42nd Parliament, 1st Session. (The original version is on Parliament’s site, as are the minutes.) The winning word was debate.

A recording is available from Parliament.

On the agenda

MPs speaking

Also speaking

Scott Millar  Director General, Strategic Policy, Planning and Partnerships, Communications Security Establishment
Cherie Henderson  Director General, Policy and Foreign Relations, Canadian Security Intelligence Service
Charles Arnott  Manager, Strategic Policy, Communications Security Establishment
Philippe Méla  Legislative Clerk
John Davies  Director General, National Security Policy, Department of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness
Douglas Breithaupt  Director and General Counsel, Criminal Law Policy Section, Department of Justice
Merydee Duthie  Special Advisor, Canadian Security Intelligence Service

11:55 a.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

In the interest of letting the committee move ahead, and in the interest of collegiality, and now that I have gotten myself in a procedural jam, having called the vote, I'm going to walk that back and ask Ms. May to speak to her amendments: PV-8, PV-9, PV-16, PV-17, PV-18, PV-19, PV-20, PV-21, and PV-26.

Noon

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

Yes. I have them grouped as PV-8 to PV-12, PV-15 to PV-22, and PV-24 to PV-26. They all refer to the same point. They may not all be exactly the same as Mr. Dubé's, but I am prepared to deal with all of them at once.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

However, some of them are still alive.

Noon

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

Yes.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

Apparently, I don't have to walk back. We can deal with the ones I've enumerated, but you are still alive on a number of others. The only reason you are being defeated, if you will, on this one is that they are similar to Mr. Dubé's.

Noon

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

That works for me, Mr. Chair. You don't have to walk anything back, and I'll still have a chance to speak to my amendments after the vote.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

It preserves the dignity of the chair, and that's all-important.

Noon

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

That's paramount.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

Yes, it is.

Having gone through this back and forth, colleagues, with the exception of NDP-51, which is Mr. Dubé's fallback position, we are voting on all of the enumerated PV and NDP amendments that were read into the record.

Noon

NDP

Matthew Dubé NDP Beloeil—Chambly, QC

I'd like a recorded vote.

(Amendment negatived: nays 7; yeas 1 [See Minutes of Proceedings])

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

With that, NDP-47 is defeated, and all of those amendments enumerated previously along with the PV ones enumerated previously.

I'm going to have to call on our clerk here to keep us in line.

Noon

Conservative

Glen Motz Conservative Medicine Hat—Cardston—Warner, AB

If you don't mind, could you just slowly go through the NDP and PV amendments that are no longer in play, please?

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

NDP-48 is no longer in play. NDP-51 is. NDP-54 is out, and NDP-56 is out.

Noon

Liberal

Pam Damoff Liberal Oakville North—Burlington, ON

Slow down.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

Sorry. NDP-56, NDP-57, NDP-58, NDP-59, NDP-60, NDP-61, NDP-62, NDP-63, NDP-64, and NDP-66 are defeated.

Noon

Conservative

Glen Motz Conservative Medicine Hat—Cardston—Warner, AB

That's one way to get past clause-by-clause.

Noon

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

It's to be recommended.

On the PV amendments, they are PV-8, PV-9, PV-16, PV-17, PV-18, PV-19, PV-20, PV-21, and PV-26.

12:05 p.m.

Conservative

Blaine Calkins Conservative Red Deer—Lacombe, AB

Are those the ones that are in or out?

12:05 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

Those are all out.

Now, the next vote in light of the defeat of NDP-47 is on clause 95. This is not a recorded vote.

(Clause 95 agreed to on division)

(Clause 96 agreed to on division)

(On clause 97)

12:05 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

I think PV-10 is still alive.

Ms. May.

April 24th, 2018 / 12:05 p.m.

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

Thank you, Mr. Chair.

I propose—and the clerk can check if I've got this right—to deal with amendments PV-10, PV-11, PV-12, PV-13, PV-14, PV-15, PV-22 et PV-25.

I think those are all the amendments in this regard.

These amendments all speak to the same point, and I think those are all the ones that remain extant after the slaughter of Mr. Dubé's amendments. Sorry. It's a ritualized slaughter. We appreciate the effort.

I think those are the ones I could speak to all at once and, with the chair's permission, speak to the fundamental point these amendments are trying to achieve. I hope, because of the unusual nature of this process before second reading, that some of my words might reach ministers' offices as well, and that members of the committee might consider whether it isn't wise to actually have a fundamental rethink of the structure of our security intelligence legislation.

This is an important moment, as we all know. This is the most fundamental review we have had in years. It's really good legislation insofar as it sets up the national security intelligence and review agency. Having NSIRA is a big change, but in my view, Mr. Chair, it doesn't take away from the fundamental mistake that was made in Bill C-51.

Forgive me, but having been through the hearings at Bill C-51, I know there were witnesses this committee didn't hear talking about the risks of CSIS having kinetic powers at all. That's what I want to speak to. I will be brief.

This legislation reduces the wrongs that could be done by CSIS agents having these new powers to disrupt plots, but it doesn't deal with something quite fundamental that we grappled with in committee on Bill C-51. It was certainly raised by witnesses and experts like Craig Forcese and John Major, former Supreme Court justice, and also in the Senate. Actually one of the most important witnesses on Bill C-51 was heard on the Senate side. His name's Joe Fogarty. He was the U.K. security liaison with Canada. He was an MI5 agent from the U.K. What he pointed to was the big risk of the RCMP and CSIS not talking to each other, and when you then give CSIS powers to actually disrupt plots, you have an accident waiting to happen, basically.

In his evidence, he referred the committee only to those things that are publicly known, but he assured the committee that, from his work as a U.K. security liaison in the Five Eyes system with Canada, there were more examples of which he could not speak. He directed us to the 2009 case of R. vs. Ahmad where, on the evidence, CSIS discovered the location of a suspected terrorist training camp within Canada and decided not to tell the RCMP.

There's another example, which was in the Canadian Press, to which Joe Fogarty also referred. In the case of Jeffrey Delisle, which we all know—the navy officer who sold secrets—apparently CSIS knew of the spying operations of Delisle for a very long time and decided not to tell the RCMP. Delisle was arrested when the RCMP was tipped off by the FBI.

There's a fundamental problem here, which John Major at the time referred to in this committee and its predecessor in the 41st Parliament. It's human nature not to want to share information, so what have we done now? I think we've compounded the problem because CSIS now has the powers to take action, but we haven't dealt with the fundamentals that it still may not want to tell the RCMP.

The situation is much improved because NSIRA can supervise what's going on. If it sees a problem, it can maybe intervene, but there still has never been a public policy rationale put forward by anyone, ever, for why CSIS needs the power to disrupt plots. CSIS was created, as Mr. Dubé referred to moments ago, in order to create a security and intelligence gathering, to give that information to the RCMP. That's the purpose. It was to separate it out, so that you wouldn't have the RCMP burning down barns and so on.

I don't see to this day why we want CSIS agents to have the capacity to disrupt plots within Canada.

The RCMP and CSIS need to work together and NSIRA needs to supervise them. All my amendments take out of our legislation the right of CSIS agents to have kinetic powers. Again, Bill C-59 improves on Bill C-51 in important ways, reducing and better balancing what CSIS agents are likely to do. I know we don't have anyone here from the RCMP on our witness roster but the RCMP job of disrupting plots will be complicated by the fact that CSIS doesn't share information with the RCMP. That's a pattern. That's our history. Things are improved in what CSIS agents can do. Thanks to Liberal amendment 16, we won't be worrying about torture, but there's still no public policy rationale for CSIS agents having these new powers to take kinetic action to disrupt plots.

I'm raising a different issue. The issue of whether we are undermining our own security intelligence operations by having different intelligence agencies tripping over each other, not talking to each other, when they're taking active steps to disrupt a plot. I'd rather have CSIS continue to do what it's always done since its creation, which is to collect the information and give it to the RCMP in a timely manner, which is what they haven't always done, so that the RCMP can arrest the Jeffrey Delisles of this world, not wait to be tipped off by the FBI or trip over CSIS agents who are trying to do the same thing.

Thank you.

12:10 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

Thank you, Ms. May.

Before I open it up for debate, I just want to clarify what a vote will mean on PV-10, making sure that you and we are on the same page. In the unlikely event that it might be defeated, PV-10 applies to PV-11, PV-12, PV-15, PV-22, PV-24 and PV-25. Is that correct?

12:10 p.m.

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

Technically I've spoken to one of my amendments only. You can either decide that the vote applies to them all or you can decide to go ahead and vote against them without giving me the opportunity to speak, which is fine in this case because I've spoken to them as a group.

However you want to handle this administratively within collecting the votes, I've spoken to them as a group. You can vote on them as a group or leave them in the same order but I won't speak to them again.

12:10 p.m.

Liberal

The Chair Liberal John McKay

I don't think speaking is the issue. I think voting is the issue here.

12:10 p.m.

Green

Elizabeth May Green Saanich—Gulf Islands, BC

Okay.