
ROTHENBURGER: Johnston is right – there shouldn’t be a public inquiry into the China issue
OF COURSE — let me repeat, of course — there should not be a public inquiry into China’s interference in Canada’s elections.
Judging by the pundits’ and opposition politicians’ reaction over the past two days, I may be the only everyday Canadian who agrees with former governor-general David Johnston on that score.
Opposition leaders — especially the Conservatives’ ever-obnoxious Pierre Poilievre — have been working themselves into a lather doubling down on their insistence that a public inquiry is an absolute necessity, and attacking Johnston’s credibility.
Maybe they should read Johnson’s report. He clearly states the irrefutable reasons a public inquiry, which, by the way, would be long and every expensive, would be pointless.