Key moments from Gerald Butts's SNC-Lavalin testimony - Action News
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Key moments from Gerald Butts's SNC-Lavalin testimony

Gerald Butts, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's former principal secretary, is challenging former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould's version of events on the SNC-Lavalin file as he speaks before the House of Commons justice committee in Ottawa.
Gerald Butts, former principal secretary to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, left, testified Wednesday about his recollection of meetings and communication with former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould over the SNC-Lavalin affair. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press, Chris Wattie/Reuters)

Gerald Butts, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's former principal secretary, challenged former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould's version of events on the SNC-Lavalinfile during testimony before the House of Commons justice committee in Ottawa Wednesday.

Butts said there was no co-ordinated effort inside the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) to pressure Wilson-Raybouldto overrule the director of public prosecutions and negotiate a deferred prosecutionagreement (DPA) withSNC-Lavalinso it couldavoid a trial over allegationsit used bribery to secure government contracts in Libya.

"Absolutely not," he said whenasked if he or anyone else exerted such influence on the former minister. "I really don't have an opinion on what decision the current or former attorney general should make. I'm glad I'm not in their shoes."

Watch Gerry Butts' full opening statement to the justice committee:

Butts: 'Not here to quarrel with the former attorney general'

6 years ago
Duration 2:28
Gerald Butts, Justin Trudeau's former principal secretary, delivers the beginning of his opening statement before MPs investigating the SNC-Lavalin matter.

Butts also categorically denied thatWilson-Raybouldwas removed from cabinet because of her refusal to pursue a DPA as she herself said under questioning last week and saidrather the shuffle was prompted solely by former Treasury Board president ScottBrison'sunexpected December resignation.

Butts said he was not aware of her apparent discomfort about lobbying efforts onthe SNC-Lavalin file until she was removed from the Justice portfolioin January 2019 as part of that shuffle.

Under questioning from NDP MP Charlie Angus, Butts said he has a "very different version of events" than does the former attorney general and would not "cast aspersions" on a former colleague for what he called her subjective take on the matter.

"What I am here to do is to give evidence that what happened last fall is in fact very different from the version of events you heard last week," he said.

Reading from text messages he exchanged with Wilson-Raybould, Butts told the committee that the only meeting he had with her on the issue was held at her request. Wilson-Raybouldhad testified that they both had sought out the Dec. 5 meeting at Ottawa's Chateau Laurier.

"Hey there GBdo you want to chat? I have a number of things to bring up maybe you do as well? Tomorrow after Cabinet perhaps? Thx Jod," the text message from Wilson-Raybould said.

'Many people's livelihoods are stake'

Butts suggested that if Wilson-Raybould requested the sit-down which was to include discussion of files other than SNC-Lavalinit would be unfair to say he personallyhad pressured her to take a particular course of action on the prosecution.

Butts said the government encouraged Wilson-Raybould to hire outside legal counsel like former Supreme Court chief justiceBeverleyMcLachlin to solicit advice on whether she should sign a DPA.

"This was a novel law. It was the first time it had ever been used," Butts said.

Butts said the Prime Minister's Office wanted Wilson-Raybould to consider all options, given the potential for grave economic consequences for the company if it were convicted of the criminal offences.

"In a case like this when so many people's livelihoods are stake ... we took a really hard look at it because you want to be able,when you go knock on your doorson the weekend,you wanted to be able to look employees and pensioners in the eye and say, 'We gave this a good hard look.' That's all that was motivating us," he said.

Butts said the former attorney-general never made it clear to him that she had come to a final conclusion on the matter, adding he first learned she was not open to further intervention on this file from her appearance before the committee last week.

If Wilson-Raybould felt the lobbying effortsto get her to consider hiring legal counsel for a second opinion on a DPAcrossed the line, he said, "she had an obligation to at least inform the prime minister in writing."

Butts said he doesn't understand why Wilson-Raybould continued to accept meetings on the matter months after she is said to have made a final decision not to pursue a DPA.

"Why would there be a next step at all? Why would the Attorney-General take and solicit meetings on a closed matter?" Butts said.

Gerry Butts: 'Why would the attorney general solicit and take meetings on a closed matter.'

6 years ago
Duration 1:02
"My understanding ... is that the attorney general's power to direct the DPP extends until the time a verdict is rendered."

Conservative MP Lisa Raittasked Butts if he knew the prime minister allegedly toldWilson-Raybould during their Sept. 17 meeting on the issue that"I am an MP in Quebec the member for Papineau." Raitt said that political considerations should not drive legal considerations.

Butts said he "absolutely" agreed with that principle but addedhewas not at the meeting in question. "There's a gray area in what you think is a political consideration," Butts said.

Asked whether it was appropriate to mention an upcoming provincial election in Quebec in discussions about signing a DPA somethingWilson-Raybould said happened at a meeting with Trudeau and Clerk of the Privy Council Michael Wernick Butts said public policy decisions are not made on the basis of electoral fortunes alone, and noted that the government concluded its NAFTAnegotiations by agreeing to controversial dairy provisions that don't sit well with farmers in Quebec.

Wilson-Raybouldconsidered possibility of a DPA for only 12 days

  • Under questioning from Raitt, Butts said the PMOwas principally concerned about the fact that Wilson-Raybould only considered whether to pursue a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) for 12 days.
  • According to Wilson-Raybould's version of events last week, the director of public prosecutions decided onSept. 4 not to pursue a DPAwith SNC-Lavalinand Wilson-Raybould came to a similar conclusion on Sept.16.
  • Speaking of his childhood in Cape Breton, where coal mining was once the dominant industrial employment, Butts said he hoped Ottawa considered the matter of closing the then Crown-owned coal operations for more than 12 days. WhenCape Breton Development Corporation (DEVCO), the federal Crown corporation that ran the island's mines, wound down its operations, thousands of people lost their jobs.(The last underground DEVCO-owned mine in Cape Breton closed in 2001.)

Gerry Butts invokes coal mine closing analogy during SNC Lavalin committee appearance.

6 years ago
Duration 1:25
"We wanted to make sure that every due consideration was given to both options."
  • Butts said Wilson-Raybould never told him she had made a final decision on this file by that date,which explains why lobbying efforts continued.
  • "My understanding is that nobody in the PMO or PCO [Privy Council Office] knew that at the time either. In fact, it is not to my knowledge how the law works. My understanding, which was informed by the public service and lawyers in the PMO, is that the attorney general's power to direct the DPP extends until the time a verdict is rendered," Butts said.
  • "My further understanding is that the attorney general is free to take advice on the decision until that point, and is obligated to bring fresh eyes to new evidence," he said.

Gerry Butts: "... an obligation to inform the prime minister."

6 years ago
Duration 0:48
"I believe that if any minister is made aware of something they think is this wrong, I believe they have an obligation to inform the prime minister soon after they become aware of it."
  • Butts said the government suggested outside legal advice because the legislation allowing for a DPA was so new; it had only just been passed as part of omnibus budget legislationless than six months earlier, in spring 2018.
  • Butts said he believes Wilson-Raybould was "obliged" to consider new evidence in the case. The director of public prosecution herself reconsidered a DPA when new evidence was presented by the company on Oct. 9, he said.

Cabinet shuffle

  • Butts said the January cabinet shuffle had nothing to do with theSNC-Lavalinaffair at allbut rather was prompted by the unexpected, and swift, departure of former Nova Scotia minister ScottBrison."We had no idea he was even thinking about retirement," he said.
  • "Let me say at the outset, categorically, the January cabinet shuffle had absolutely nothing to do with the SNC-Lavalin. In fact, I spent at least as much time working with colleagues to prevent the shuffle from happening as I did in preparing my advice for it," Butts said.
  • Butts said the prime minister already had made his pre-election shuffle and was happy with the existing lineup.
  • At first,Trudeauwanted to moveWilson-Raybouldto the Indigenous Services portfolio, but she did something Butts said he has never seen before in government: she refused the position outright, saying she'dspent her whole career fighting the Indian Act.
  • Butts said Former Treasury Board president Jane Philpott flagged to the prime minister during an in-person meetingon Jan. 6, 2019 before the actual shuffle that Wilson-Raybouldmight perceive a move to Indigenous Services as a demotion from a portfolioshe loved: justice.
  • Butts said Philpott then told the prime minister that she worried Wilson-Raybould might wonder if her move was connected to the "DPA issue." Trudeauassured her that movewas not at all related to the DPA or SNC-Lavalin, but rather toBrison's departure and the need for an experienced minister to take over his Treasury Board portfolio.
  • Butts said that was the "first time I ever heard anyone suggest that this cabinet shuffle was in any way related to the SNC-Lavalin file."
  • Butts said he believes he andWilson-Raybouldhad worked well together. "I felt like we couldgenerally work things out," Butts said. He says trust between the two broke down in the context of thecabinet shuffle whenWilson-Raybouldvoiced displeasure with any sort of move.

Butts' opening statement

  • Butts said he didn't come before the committee to"quarrel with the former attorney general or say a single negative word about her personally" but added that, at all times, the Prime Minister's Office believed the decision to direct the director of public prosecutions to sign a deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with SNC-Lavalinwould beWilson-Raybould's alone to make.
  • Butts said that because so many jobs are at stake more than 9,000 direct jobs, but also many in the company's supply chain people in government suggested Wilson-Raybould should solicit outside legal counsel on whether it was appropriate for her to pursue a DPA.
  • Butts said Wilson-Raybould should have raised any and all concerns about what she has described asinappropriate pressure with the prime minister directly.
  • "This is a basic and important point," Butts said.
  • "If any cabinet minister is made aware of something they think is wrong, I believe at a minimum they have an obligation to inform the prime minister soon after they become aware of it," he said. "If it is a question of law and that minister is the attorney general, the obligation to inform the prime minister is of an even higher order. And it ought to be in writing so that its significance isn't lost on its lay audience."