Emergencies Act commission hears final arguments as public hearings conclude
OTTAWA — The public inquiry probing the Liberal government’s decision to invoke the Emergencies Act in response to last winter’s weeks-long “Freedom Convoy” protest is hearing closing arguments from lawyers representing governments, police services, cities and protesters themselves.
The arguments come at the end of the final day of hearings at the Public Order Emergency Commission, which heard testimony from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau earlier today.
A lawyer for the federal government says it’s clear after six weeks of testimony that there were serious threats of violence by demonstrators, that blockades posed threats to the economic security of Canada and that there were reasonable grounds to declare a national emergency.
But not all of the parties to the inquiry agree, with a lawyer for the protesters saying that the act was government overreach and lawyers for Alberta and Saskatchewan saying provincial governments were not consulted enough on the special powers.