Federal minister plays down contacts with Irving before suspending rival’s deal
OTTAWA — Treasury Board President Scott Brison has played down his ties to Irving Shipbuilding, saying his only contact with the company before spearheading efforts to pause a rival shipbuilder’s project was a letter sent to him and several other ministers.
The federal minister’s relationship with Irving has been under scrutiny since Vice-Admiral Mark Norman’s lawyers accused Brison in court filings last week of being close to the Irving family and being a frequent target of their company’s lobby efforts.
The suggestion, since picked up by the opposition Conservatives, is that Brison acted inappropriately by leading an effort in November 2015 to suspend a $668-million contract with Irving-rival Davie Shipbuilding for an interim naval support ship.
Norman was charged in March with one count of breach of trust for allegedly leaking government secrets to Davie after the interim supply-ship project was paused. He has denied any wrongdoing and is scheduled to stand trial next year.