CBC News
February 22, 2022
-CBC
A B.C. member of Parliament claims one of his constituents had her bank account frozen simply for donating to the “Freedom Convoy” protests.
In a tweet on Sunday, Chilliwack-Hope MP Mark Strahl said a woman called Briane, “a single mom from Chilliwack working a minimum wage job,” had apparently fallen foul of the Emergencies Act, which was recently invoked by the federal government in a bid to stop protesters occupying streets in downtown Ottawa.
“She gave $50 to the convoy when it was 100% legal. She hasn’t participated in any other way. Her bank account has now been frozen. This is who Justin Trudeau is actually targeting with his Emergencies Act orders,” Strahl said in his tweet.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act for the first time in Canada’s history on Feb. 14. The act gives police more tools to restore order in places where public assemblies constitute illegal and dangerous activities, such as blockades and occupations.
Briane is a single mom from Chilliwack working a minimum wage job. She gave $50 to the convoy when it was 100% legal. She hasn’t participated in any other way. Her bank account has now been frozen. This is who Justin Trudeau is actually targeting with his Emergencies Act orders.
— Mark Strahl, MP (@markstrahl) February 20, 2022
Only protest influencer names given to banks: RCMP
Last week, Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said the accounts of people linked to the demonstrations in Ottawa had been frozen, and vowed to take more accounts offline to prevent organizers from accessing the money they needed to remain in the nation’s capital.
Shortly after Strahl’s tweet, the RCMP released a statement saying they provided a list of influencers in the Ottawa protests to financial institutions, but did not give them the names of individual donors.
“We are now working with the banks to build a process to address the accounts that were frozen,” the statement says.
Strahl has declined to speak to CBC News about the tweet.
Vancouver Granville MP Taleeb Noormohamed says he’s “quite skeptical” about the claim and has written to Strahl asking for more information, offering to help rectify the situation.
“It is not the intention of the act to impact average law abiding citizens,” the Liberal MP told CBC’s The Early Edition host Stephen Quinn.
“I hope that we live in a world where folks that are elected to public office right now would not want to undermine credibility in our democratic institution.”
From one colleague to another: @markstrahl – if this is true & she can provide proof this is the only reason her account was frozen, I’ll personally help you solve this for Briane – in confidence.
But if it’s not, you agree to unreservedly and publicly apologise. Fair?#cdnpoli https://t.co/oQ0mI20GEG— Taleeb Noormohamed 🇨🇦 (@Taleeb) February 21, 2022
While the powers contained in the Emergency Act took effect immediately, the Liberal government needed to seek approval for its decision to invoke the act from the House of Commons within seven days. On Monday, MPs voted in favour of keeping the act in place.
Immediately after the Emergencies Act vote passed, interim Conservative Leader Candice Bergen tried to enter a motion recalling its use, but the motion was ruled out of order.