OTTAWA -- Federal Liberal cabinet ministers will instruct their staff not to appear if called to any parliamentary committees in an attempt to curb what they call an "abuse of power" by opposition parties.
The Conservatives are seeking to summon political staff and civil servants to testify about the WE Charity affair and about how the government handled a sexual-misconduct allegation against the country's top soldier.
Liberal House leader Pablo Rodriguez says it has long been a practice of Parliament for the buck to stop with cabinet ministers when it comes to who is held responsible and questioned at committee.
The Conservatives' motion Thursday is nothing but a "heavy handed" form of partisan intimidation, Rodriguez said.
"Members of this House are protected from intimidation through our parliamentary privilege. It is irresponsible for members to turn this protection into weapons against those who are not covered by these protections," Rodriguez said in the House of Commons Thursday morning.
"Not only is it irresponsible, it is a clear abuse of power."
The Conservatives' motion is aimed at getting three members of the prime minister's staff before the ethics committee to provide more information on the WE Charity affair.
They also want the former chief of staff to the defence minister, who now works for another minister, to appear at the defence committee to shed more light on sexual misconduct issues in the Canadian Armed Forces.
Conservative ethics critic Michael Barrett accused the Liberals of trying to hide the truth.
"All of these individuals have direct knowledge of the issues the committees have been studying and they must testify so that Canadians can have the truth," Barrett said.
He dismissed any notion that Canadians are not as engaged on these issues as they are on the COVID-19 pandemic.
"We think it's very important to Canadians that when the government is spending hundreds of millions and billions of dollars, that it's done in an effective way. "
The motion says that if Prime Minister Justin Trudeau were to show up instead for at least three hours, the staffers wouldn't have to.
The Conservatives have been trying to get those witnesses to committees but have been thwarted by the Liberals either talking out the clock or using procedural moves to avert votes.
So the Tories now want to end-run that by putting the issue to a vote on the floor of the House of Commons itself, where the opposition can more easily outmanoeuvre the minority Liberals.
Liberal MPs debating the motion brought up instances when staffers were previously called to committee, including an appearance last summer by Trudeau's chief of staff, Katie Telford, during hearings on the WE Charity controversy.
These witnesses were repeatedly interrupted, badgered and accused of trying to withhold the truth from Canadians by Opposition MPs, Rodriguez said.
That's why, despite this motion, Liberal ministers will be telling their staffers to ignore any future summons to committee and instead will only send cabinet ministers to testify, Rodriguez said.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 25, 2021.
--With files from Stephanie Levitz