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A5
NEWS I TOP NEWS
Stefanson’s legacy tarnished in absence of apology
O
NE of the most troubling as-
pects about former Premier
Heather Stefanson’s 2023
ethics breach isn’t just what she did
— it’s that she still doesn’t think she
did anything wrong.
Stefanson was fined $18,000 for try-
ing to push through a licence for a Sio
Silica sand mine project after losing
the Oct. 3, 2023, provincial election.
She paid the fine last week, according
to House Speaker Tom Lindsey. But
she remains defiant.
Ethics Commissioner Jeffrey
Schnoor’s report on the breach, re-
leased in May, was damning. It found
that Stefanson, then-deputy premier
Cliff Cullen and then-economic devel-
opment minister Jeff Wharton violated
the province’s Conflict of Interest
Act by trying to approve a licence for
the proposed mining project after the
Progressive Conservative government
was defeated.
All three ministers pushed to have
a Class 2 licence under the Environ-
ment Act approved for Sio Silica, days
before the new NDP government was
sworn into office.
That violated the “caretaker con-
vention,” a constitutional principle in
Canada that prohibits governments
from making major policy decisions
once a general election is called, unless
it relates to an urgent matter of public
importance, like a natural disaster.
What made this scandal even more
severe is Stefanson attempted to get
the licence approved not just after the
election was called, but after her gov-
ernment was defeated at the polls.
“The efforts to have the project
licence approved by Ms. Stefanson, Mr.
Cullen and Mr. Wharton were taken
despite their knowledge that voters
had rejected the former government
and had placed their trust in a new
government,” Schnoor wrote in his
report. “All three knew the require-
ments of the caretaker convention
and both Mr. Cullen and Mr. Wharton
had been given specific warnings that
approving the project licence during
the transition period would breach the
convention.”
The facts of the case are straight-
forward. The Sio Silica proposal was
undergoing a detailed environmental
assessment by provincial regulators.
There were serious concerns raised
by environmental officials and others
about potential groundwater contam-
ination and the project’s long-term
safety.
Instead of letting that process run its
course, Stefanson decided to intervene.
Worse, she did so after her government
lost the election.
She pressed officials to expedite a
decision.
That is textbook political interfer-
ence. The licence was ultimately not
approved, but the fact that the person
holding the province’s highest office
couldn’t see that she was breaking the
law — or worse, didn’t care — is what
makes this so egregious.
It was an attack on democracy.
“The caretaker convention stands at
the very core of our democracy,” wrote
Schnoor. “The legitimacy of a govern-
ment depends on the support of the
electorate, expressed in elections. A
government that loses an election has
lost the confidence of the people and
has lost the legitimacy to do anything
beyond maintaining the status quo
until the new government can take
office.”
For a former premier to reject those
findings — or at least show indiffer-
ence to them — from an independent
officer of the legislative assembly is
nothing short of stunning.
After Schnoor’s report was released,
Stefanson released a statement saying
she spoke to the NDP about the project.
“I had no obligation to do so but
reached out to the incoming govern-
ment and fully considered their views
before deciding on what to do,” Ste-
fanson said in a statement earlier this
year, noting a licence was never issued
to Sio Silica.
The fact the former premier still re-
fuses to acknowledge the ethical impli-
cations of her actions speaks volumes
about her integrity. She’s treating the
commissioner’s findings like a political
disagreement rather than a legal deter-
mination by an independent officer of
the legislature.
That’s the truly galling part.
This isn’t a partisan witch hunt. It’s
an official finding under Manitoba’s
own laws. The ethics commissioner
is an impartial watchdog, tasked with
upholding the integrity of public office.
When that office determines the pre-
mier broke the law, you’d expect some
humility — maybe even an apology.
Instead, Stefanson is showing defiance.
The former premier argues she
didn’t stand to gain financially from
the proposed mining project. That’s
not the point.
The point is she attempted to make
a major policy decision when she no
longer had the moral authority to do so.
Manitoba voters rejected her govern-
ment and she was no longer in a posi-
tion to make decisions on their behalf.
The $18,000 fine — though unprece-
dented in Manitoba — is a slap on the
wrist compared to the damage done to
public trust. What really matters now
is whether political leaders, from all
parties, learn from this.
Stefanson clearly hasn’t learned that
lesson.
In her mind, she’s the victim of over-
zealous oversight — a premier pun-
ished for trying to grow the economy.
That’s what makes this entire epi-
sode so troubling. It’s not just that she
broke the law, it’s that even after being
caught, she still believes she’s above it.
If Stefanson wants to salvage what’s
left of her tattered political legacy, she
should do the right thing and acknowl-
edge wrongdoing. She should issue an
unqualified public apology.
Anything less would leave an endur-
ing black mark on her time in politics.
tom.brodbeck@freepress.mb.ca
TOM BRODBECK
OPINION
MIKE DEAL / FREE PRESS FILES
For former Premier Heather Stefanson to
reject findings from an independent officer
of the legislative assembly is nothing short
of stunning.
;