The former Governor General himself is now being accused of treason by journalists. My goodness. pic.twitter.com/13o10zFYs0
— Gerald Butts (@gmbutts) March 17, 2023
Just look at the spectacle, the vitriol, the partisanship, the knee jerk “journalism”, and then tell me a PUBLIC Inquiry would best serve the seriousness of this situation. A total embarrassing shit show, and what we see now is proof positive it would be a circus. #cdnpoli
— Steve V π IAMCANADIAN π (@FarAndWide) March 17, 2023
The Globe is bringing starters on in relief and it’s only the middle innings. https://t.co/hscCTjUNzS
— Gerald Butts (@gmbutts) March 17, 2023
There really is no bottom. The CPC version of politics is to flood the public square with toxic sludge so nobody wants to enter it. https://t.co/X8ZFllKhiB
— Gerald Butts (@gmbutts) March 16, 2023
Paranoia strikes deep.
— David Hamer π¨π¦πΊπ¦π¨π¦ (@DavidHamer_1951) March 16, 2023
Into your life it will creep.
= The @acoyne test for reasonable apprehension of bias.
(With apologies to Buffalo Springfield)
π€·πΌππ€·πΌ#cdnpoli https://t.co/dgqMkTnMcY
Scrimshaw wrote an amazing post yesterday outlining how convoluted and messy the story has become:Let me get this straight, after weeks of frenzied coverage based on unverified evidence, a parliamentary committee, hysteria on twitter by the architects, smearing David Johnston’s good name and now an anonymous letter by who knows… we are supposed to just go with it? Are you… https://t.co/xnAq1SfW6r
— LALegault⚾️@newsie.social (@LALegault) March 18, 2023
Tonight there is a big article in the Globe and Mail from a CSIS "whistleblower" -- or maybe "leaker" is more accurate? Intelligence expert Jessica Davis writes this tweet thread:"What the Trudeau Foundation is accused of having done has quite literally nothing to do with the questions about election interference, but Fife connected that reporting through the connective tissue of being "China" stories. They’re not the same though"https://t.co/IldaQYSLuY
— Evan Scrimshaw (@EScrimshaw) March 16, 2023
Also the rather loose grasp on the security of information act. “While what I have done may be unlawful”. “May” is doing a lot of work there.
— JMDavis (@JessMarinDavis) March 17, 2023
But the actions of this individual have also eroded trust in our public institutions amongst Canadians and probably amongst our intelligence allies.
— JMDavis (@JessMarinDavis) March 17, 2023
Here's the link to that 48-page CSIS public report published in 2021 - in the chapter on Election Security the report informs us that their inter-agency conference discussed how its work to keep elections secure would include:Also, I take issue with “whistleblower” here. I’m gonna go with leaker. Whistleblowers share info that is unlawful, illicit, fraudulent, etc. This person just didn’t like the government’s response to the information.
— JMDavis (@JessMarinDavis) March 17, 2023
• Regular security intelligence briefings to key senior government decision makers and political party representatives;• Reviewing and conducting appropriate measures to reduce the threat from specific hostile state proxies or agents;• Increased reporting and transparency on electoral security matters through interagency personnel exchanges; and• Assessing sources of disinformation (defined as entities that wittingly publish false information to deliberately mislead Canadians)
Okay, how much of this is just an extended public pissing contest at this point
— Evan Scrimshaw (@EScrimshaw) March 17, 2023
Finally, this sums up the reason for the hysteria:"CSIS is clearly sick of the RCMP getting in the way of doing something about what they believe to be serious and substantial security threats, and elements of it have decided to go around them"
— Evan Scrimshaw (@EScrimshaw) March 18, 2023
Me, on the Great CSIS-RCMP Warhttps://t.co/8ut0Tq7fbf
The next campaign will put the "Sunny Ways" approach to the test.
— Ian Gillespie (@IanRGillespie) March 17, 2023
I honestly don't wish to be mean, but the blue leader's biggest problem is 2 words: Deeply. Unlikable.
The Libs best ads would basically be: "Him? Really?" followed up with the adult version of that message…
2 comments:
PP would like Tamara Lich, Jamie SalΓ© or Theo Fleury appointed rapporteur. Too bad none has the required security clearance. The pool of suitable candidates is quite small. The Cons bashing Johnstone tells me they have something to hide and are looking to discredit the inquiry from the start. It's no secret that Ontario PC MPP Vincent Ke was the first casualty of "Chinagate."
My sense is that the inquiry will find that China tries to get first-generation Chinese-Canadians elected regardless of party affiliation. New immigrants still have strong ties to the homeland, and their families in China can be threatened or rewarded. It's much harder to do that with Canadian-born candidates who have no ties to China and may not even speak the language. I think we'll also find that a lot of disinformation is circulated on WeChat, a Chinese messaging app widely used in Chinese-speaking communities. This has been reported in several elections. None of this is new, and China isn't the only country that uses its diaspora to influence elections.
Hi Cap
Interesting comment -- I had never considered whether the Johnston bashing is a tip-off about Conservative guilt, but that makes sense - the volume of hysteria has really been off the charts, and Poilievre is loudest
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