Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

Rights and Democracy: Time keeps on slippin’…

by Paul Wells on Monday, August 30, 2010 11:19am - 0 Comments

Last week I decided to check in on the Deloitte forensic audit of Rights and Democracy, which the agency’s interim president announced in February and expected to receive three weeks later. In May the new president expected to make it public in June. In July he said it wouldn’t be available before the end of the summer. (The electronic trail of all of this can be found by clicking on the “Rights and Democracy” tag at the bottom of this blog post.)

I wrote to the communications people for Rights and Democracy:

It has now been just over a month since I last inquired about the Deloitte audit of Rights and Democracy. I am writing today with some further inquiries, which I hope you’ll pass along to Mr. Latulippe or anyone who can answer them.

1. Has Deloitte delivered the audit?

2. If so, when was it delivered?

3. If it has been delivered, when will it be released to the public and/or the Commons committee on foreign affairs?

4. In the interest of transparency and accountability, please account for any delay between Rights and Democracy’s receipt of the audit and its release to parliamentarians and the public.

5. If Deloitte has not yet delivered the audit, do you know when it will?

Thanks once again for all your help.

Sincerely,

Paul Wells

This morning I received a reply from Gérard Latulippe directly. Here it is in its entirety:

Dear Mr Wells;

I received your email query .

In response to your question as to whether Deloitte has delivered the audit, I am pleased to tell you that I just received the final report. I am sending it to Rights & Democracy’s lawyers to obtain a legal opinion on the report’s contents. It will also have to be translated, as per Rights & Democracy’s Official Languages obligations.

Once the legal consultation and translation are complete, the report will be given to the members of Rights & Democracy’s Board of Directors for discussion .

As to the audit report’s distribution, it is for Rights & Democracy’s Board of Directors to take the decision. In that regard, the only information I can provide at this stage is that the next scheduled meeting of the Board is October 25, 2010.

Please feel free to contact me if you need any further clarifications.

Yours truly,

Gérard Latulippe

Président, Droits et Démocratie – Rights & Democracy

I wrote back, asking whether I understood correctly: Will the Deloitte report not be sent to the Foreign Affairs minister or the Commons foreign-affairs committee before the board meets in late October? Latulippe replied:

It is not clear for me at this point. It will be for the board to decide if they want a special meeting before the October board meeting which [would] involve a special procedure and cost.

I don’t know about all of you, but I’m torn. On one hand, it’s starting to be a while since the new board majority at R&D took it into its head to order up a forensic audit, with the promise that it would cast a proper light on the financial mismanagement that Aurel Braun and his lot had spent months cavalierly alleging. There was, back then, a tone of urgency to the whole project. Results would be made public “as soon as possible” after the board accepted the report, Jacques Gauthier, who still sits on the board, promised. That promise permits, but did not really imply, a two-month delay for the board to accept the report, more than five months after Deloitte blew the original three-week timeline.

On the other hand, one is reluctant to urge the R&D board to get the lead out, since it would “involve a special…cost.” This late-breaking concern for special costs can only be lauded, given that the last time anyone checked, two months ago, the new board majority’s ingenious and breathtaking list of “special procedures” had already blown half a million taxpayer dollars. All of this because Aurel Braun didn’t like expenditures amounting to less than one-twentieth that amount when R&D staff briefed him on his arrival.

So hurry up, take your time, whatever. All I can say, at the risk of repeating, is that I will not ever let this story go until the R&D board coughs up the financial transparency they promised, so many months and so much taxpayer money ago.

Some people, many of them friends of the Harper government who used to like to write about how Aurel Braun and the rest of the cavalry were finally going to set things right at the agency, have lately taken to wondering, with exhausted exasperation and amusement, why I keep at it. The answer is simple. Rémy Beauregard died while he was, by every account, well on the path to cleaning up R&D’s administration and making it an effective global advocate for the human rights all Canadians cherish. Aurel Braun and the gang were already well along in a concerted campaign to smear Beauregard’s name and they did not let his death stop them. Very well then. They will provide proof of their claims, or bear the responsibility such shocking and profligate behaviour deserves.

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  • Zeigist

    This needs to be done. Keep at it. I wonder if they are stonewalling this because Harper wants another election (again) and doesn't want this to come out before.

    Too much of what King Harper does is hidden. So much for his transparency promise, he heads the most secretive government in Canadian history.

  • PoliticalPundit

    Concern with the plight of Rights and Democracy is fine and, most certainly Wells should continue his eternal vigilance and his pit bull approach to this story..
    In the interim, Macleans has all but dropped the ball on the much broader issue of the role of religious organizations in Canadian politics and Canadian political parties — municipal, provincial, and federal.
    Marci Macdonald's Armageddon Factor makes a strong case for the existence of a powerful network of Christian organizations and a Christian nationalism. Both of these phenomena are hard at work in all parts of Canada to ensure that the Harper government carries out the Christian Rights' agenda of restoring the Christian Dominion of Canada.
    The Rights and Democracy imbroglio is only a very small part of the Harper government's agenda in this regard. It is time journalists also focused on the many, many other ways Harper is pursuing and implementing his party's religious agenda with the backing and support of the Christian Nationalists and their myriad of organizations.

  • NorthernPoV

    Hey, I'm with Blue!
    If you do not care to praise (for example) the Economic Action Plan, the F18 purchase or the incredible leadership our dear PMSH gave to the world via the G8/G20 boondoggle, then you can at least focus on those nasty terrorists that are so threatening that we should give up all our basic rights and let Stock Day clean house.

    As you are choosing to bypass these matters of import and focus on the apparent lack of transparency and mendacious activities at R&D, then it is clear that the purpose of the MacLeans website is to provide a voice for treason!

    • Blue

      Here`s the problem NPV. The reason why the blurbs from tedbetts and Emily are so irrelevant is that they have become boring and predictable in their attempts to make everything anti-Harper. Their negativity became so strident that they were convinced Harper was going to destroy the country. It reached the point of ridiculous so I had no choice but to make fun of their doom and gloom. Yours are much more readable.

      At least you have the thoughtfulness to invoke some satire into your comment, but you could not resist the urge to politicize domestic terrorism by implying that Stock Day would take away your basic rights. It would be naive of you to think that in the future the biggest problems we will have from domestic terrorism will be the restrictions on the basic rights of these terrorists. Unfortunately, if you have been to the airport since Sept. 11, 2001, you will know we all have already given up some of those basic rights.

      • cooper

        And he isn't going to destroy the country?

  • Reverend_Blair

    Paul:

    Do you ever just want to buy 47 dozen beer, a pre-dented pick-up truck, and move back in the bush someplace with nothing to do but listen to Hank Williams III and eat roasted squirrels? I think that, were I forced to try to chase down stories like this in an attempt to find some kind of truth, that would be the option I would choose.

    Fortunately, we have you to do the dirty work for us. That's really important, since I have an aversion to squirrel meat.

    So keep us posted.

    BTW, if anybody has a need for a 1981 GMC truck that may or may not run but is definitely pre-dented, let me know. It comes with a slide-in camper that only leaks when it rains.

  • Tony

    How come I have to read you everyday and Colby Cosh once a month? I think he smokes too much pot, and you don't smoke enough.

    • EFL

      Dear Tony, your estimation of who is the biggest Macleans pothead is demonstrably false. I refute you thus: http://twitpic.com/2ie71c
      Would you now have the decency to recognise that Wells is clearly the one with the grave herbal dependency, and indeed, my sources tell me that contrary to all inferences, Cosh is actually a well-known teetolling Mennonite Nickelback fan. And a diehard Joel Otto/Flames fan. Their public personas are all misdirection- I would have thought the overcompensation would have made that obvious. (PS. As I understand it, the dearly departed Maich is the real wild child, from all accounts. 'Business reporting' is an infamous dodge for being able to party to one's heart's content at wild Bay St. coke and hookers parties)

    • brooster

      Who's making you read either of them?

      • frobisher

        Staff obligations, It's a hardship in that there 'war room'. Tony has to choke down Wells while pining for a podcast of Lowell Green.

      • Tony

        I read both, cause I like reading them

        • Tony

          Lowell Green? – not everyone lives in Ottawa – I know that might surprise you

          • Tony

            And don't even mention Joel Otto, or I will punch myself in the face

          • Lord Kitchener's Own

            Joel Otto.

            What?

            If you're going to throw it right down the middle of the plate like that…

  • Phil

    Sweeeet response!!

  • bonneau

    Please continue your work on ALL files relevant to the promotion of maintenance of true democracy.

  • MasDaddy

    I wish there were more journalists with this kind of perseverance. A few friends of mine and I were talking just today about how the Harper "Conservatives" keep giving people things to be outraged about just so they can't keep up with all the madness, hence forgetting each individual incident.

    Keep up the good work.

    • bonneau

      I know, I refer to it as the 'politics of dilution'.

  • Skinny Dipper

    Thumbs up to Paul Wells!

  • JamesHalifax

    Blue asked:
    "I would like to know what you think makes young Muslim men like these ( health workers, doctors, etc.) get involved in a scheme like this alleged one where the only goal is the destruction of people and buildings."

    Hmm…geez, hard to guess, Blue.

    what could these four MUSLIM men have in common that would make them want to destroy buildings or murder innocent people.

    What could these four MUSLIM men, some in the field of health care, actually be trying to accomplish by destroying buildings and murdering innocent people?

    You have me stumped. It's not like we've seen this kind of behaviour before.

    It has to be the Canadian Health care system.

    (ok, emily and holly….you can call me names now for pointing out the obvious)

  • JamesHalifax

    As for Paul's work on the R&D file…..I think he already knows the answer to why the organization has been filleted.

    It was a group of left-wing activist types who hated the current Government and fought against everything the Conservatives believe in. It was a group containing jew-haters and pro-terrorist sympathizers, which is against everything Harper and the Conservatives believe in.

    Let's just call it what it is. Harper is the PM, and he saw the opportunity to get rid of some left-wing rot. The same thing he did with the Court Challenges Program.

    More power to him.

    Simple as that………they should just admit it.

    • Lord Kitchener's Own

      Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the entire board of R&D appointed BY HARPER. Not the current board mind you, but the one supposedly filled with "jew-haters and pro-terrorist sympathizers".

      If the Rémy Beauregard board was a bunch of left-wing activist types who stood against everything Harper and the Conservative believe in, then why on Earth did Harper and the Conservatives appoint them all???

  • JamesHalifax

    I didn't say the BOARD….I said the organization itself. It consists of a lot more folks than just the Board.

    As for the appointments: Is Harper supposed to know every individual he appoints personnally? He appointed the Budget Officer too, it doesn't mean he doesn't want to fire him.

    When Harper realized that R&D needed a major overhaul, he set about to do it. They should just come out and say as much.

    Frankly, the organization should just be scrapped. it's no longer useful to anyone.

    • Lord Kitchener's Own

      When Harper realized that R&D needed a major overhaul, he set about to do it.

      Well, sure, except that's what was done, or in the process of being done' wasn't it, and now the new new board is overhauling the overhaul. I don't necessarily have a problem with Harper replacing his own board of reformers with a new board of reformers, but it does at least suggest that he thinks his first try was an utter failure (some evidence to the contrary) and I agree that the government should probably come out and say that if they think that's the case.

      Harper replaced board members at R&D ostensibly to bring transparency and accountability to the organization. Then he replaced a bunch of THOSE guys with NEW members, ostensibly to bring transparency and accountability to the organization. Can you show me any evidence that round two of the accountability and transparency project is going better than round one? 'Cause I think that many people would argue that transparency and accountability at R&D have gotten worse and worse as time has gone on. I might even suggest that if accountability and transparency are really a desired outcome, that it might be time for Harper to replace the Harper appointees he replaced his appointees with.

  • JamesHalifax

    I don't care how many "overhauls" are required…….just keep doing it until the Organization starts behaving as though their interests are actually those of a group trying to promote democracy abroad.

    Channelling money to terrorist groups and their sympathizers is NOT what democracy is about. Sending money to Palestinians is NOT what democracy is about.

    Scrap the entire organization, or start promoting democracy in countries' that may actually have a chance of achieving it. Because Lord knows….it's been a dismal failure to date.

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