Opposition MPs accuse Champagne of voting on high-speed rail despite conflict of interest | Page 897 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Simon Tuck
Publication Date: June 11, 2026 - 19:10

Stay informed

Opposition MPs accuse Champagne of voting on high-speed rail despite conflict of interest

June 11, 2026

OTTAWA — Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne faced pointed questions Thursday over his personal connection to the federal government’s high-speed train plan, with opposition MPs accusing the minister of taking part in more than a dozen votes on the lucrative project after he declared a potential conflict.

But Champagne told the House of Commons Ethics Committee that he went beyond the call of duty by writing last September to the prime minister to add a special filter to his conflict-of-interest disclosure after his spouse was hired in August as an executive at Alto.

The organization, which falls under Transport Canada, manages the government’s plan to build high-speed rail between Toronto and Quebec city at a cost of a projected $90-billion.

Champagne had vowed not to participate in any discussions or decisions with government representatives about the proposed high-speed rail project. “I followed all the rules,” he told the committee.

But opposition MPs said Champagne didn’t follow his own promises when his first budget, two months after adding the filter, included hundreds of millions of dollars for the rail project. That money and the government’s support for the project, however, had been announced months earlier.

The government has said the new rail link, not expected to be completed for more than a decade, will add an important transportation line and will support or create more than 50,000 jobs and add $25 billion to the economy.

Opposition MPs on the committee made repeated requests that Champagne release his letter to the prime minister and his filter to the committee, but he said that is the ethics commissioner’s decision. Conservative MP Gabriel Hardy proposed a motion to compel Champagne to release the documents to the committee, but the Liberal majority voted it down.

Ethics Commissioner Konrad von Finckenstein appeared before the committee Thursday after Champagne and told MPs that he didn’t post the documents on his office’s web site because the minister’s disclosure was voluntary. Von Finckenstein said the fact that the minister’s spouse works at Alto, a wholly owned subsidiary of the federal government, is not a conflict, largely because the organization falls under the minister of transport.

“It’s simply too remote,” he told the committee.

Duff Conacher, co-founder of Democracy Watch, which advocates for democratic reform, said he doesn’t see this particular situation as a major conflict because the government had already committed to the high-speed rail project before Champagne’s spouse was hired. There’s also been no evidence presented that either Champagne or his spouse, Anne-Marie Gaudet, benefitted directly from the budget bill or other votes.

But Champagne also raised the ire of opposition MPs by repeatedly deflecting questions, including those that asked for basic facts, such as whether his spouse is an executive at Alto.

National Post

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Environment Canada has issued weather alerts across the country as temperatures as high as 37 C are expected to arrive this week. The warnings , which cover Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and a handful of areas in the Northwest Territories and Saskatchewan, are classified as either yellow or orange, depending on how high temperatures are expected to soar. Environment Canada says these warnings are put in place when hazardous weather may cause damage, disruption, or health impacts. For yellow warnings, impacts are moderate, localized and/or short-term, while orange warnings indicate major...
July 1, 2026 - 07:00 | Ellie Hutchings | National Post
Wednesday, July 1, is not only Canada Day 2026, it marks the sixth anniversary of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Free Trade Agreement (CUSMA). It’s also the date set for a trilateral review of the agreement, providing the three participating countries with two options: first, choosing a 16-year extension that would keep the agreement in place; second, choosing not to extend and triggering annual reviews of the deal, without a concluding point, unless the three nations eventually reach a deal. Prime Minister Mark Carney told National Post during a recent press conference that non-renewal on...
July 1, 2026 - 07:00 | Stewart Lewis | National Post
The issue of the finished-but-not-yet-opened Gordie Howe International Bridge continues to create ripples on both sides of the U.S.-Canada border, and far from the Michigan-Ontario crossing that is its epicentre. Among the more recent statements comes from Mike Levin, the Democratic incumbent from California’s 49th congressional district, serving in the U.S. House of Representatives since 2019. In a video posted to social media, Levin says: “There’s a brand new bridge between Detroit and Canada that is finished, it’s ready, and it’s sitting there empty because Donald Trump will not...
July 1, 2026 - 06:30 | Chris Knight | National Post