Emergencies Act earlier this year prepares to enter its public phase, the prime minister is standing firm behind his decision to use the controversial legislation — even as civil liberties groups raise questions.The Public Order Emergency Commission’s public hearings will kick off on Thursday, at which point Canadians will be able to hear from a number of different high-profile voices about whether the invocation was a justifiable response to the convoy protest that blockaded downtown Ottawa and two border crossings for weeks.
Here’s who will testify this week as Emergencies Act public inquiry hearings begin Speaking in a press conference on Wednesday, Trudeau said that the government moved forward with the measures — which he said “are not to be taken lightly” — in a “time-limited, measured way, to be able to get the situation back under control.”“But part of that process is to ensure there is proper accountability and proper oversight after the fact and that’s why there is a public inquiry into the use of the (Emergencies) Act, so that Canadians can understand what and how these powers were used,” Trudeau said.“That’s why, from the very beginning, I offered to the commission to appear at that commission so that Canadians could understand exactly why we had to do what we did.”Meanwhile, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA) — which has already taken the government to court over its use of the Emergencies Act — is promising to “vigorously test” the Liberals’ justification for using the controversial legislation.Speaking in a separate press conference on Tuesday, Cara Zwibel, director of the Fundamental Freedoms Program at the CCLA, said it is her organization’s opinion that the use of the emergency.