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Marco Mendicino

Marco Mendicino PC MP (Italian: [ˈmarko mendiˈtʃiːno]; born July 28, 1973) is a Canadian politician who has been the Minister of Public Safety since October 26, 2021. A member of the Liberal Party, Mendicino represents Eglinton—Lawrence in the House of Commons, sitting as a member of Parliament (MP) since 2015. He was the Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship from 2019 to 2021.

Marco Mendicino
Mendicino in October 2022
Minister of Public Safety
Assumed office
April 30, 2021
Prime MinisterJustin Trudeau
Preceded byBill Blair
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship
In office
November 20, 2019 – October 26, 2021
Prime MinisterJustin Trudeau
Preceded byAhmed Hussen
Succeeded bySean Fraser
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities
In office
August 31, 2018 – November 20, 2019
MinisterFrançois-Philippe Champagne
Preceded byMarc Miller
Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
In office
January 30, 2017 – August 30, 2018
MinisterJody Wilson-Raybould
Preceded byBill Blair
Succeeded byArif Virani
Member of Parliament
for Eglinton—Lawrence
Assumed office
October 19, 2015
Preceded byJoe Oliver
Personal details
Born (1973-07-28) July 28, 1973 (age 49)
Toronto, Ontario
Political partyLiberal
Residence(s)Bedford Park,[1] Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Alma materCarleton University
University of Windsor
York University
Profession
  • Lawyer
  • politician

Early life

Mendicino was born to Italian immigrant parents.[2] He studied political science at Carleton University, before attending law school at the University of Windsor. Later in his career he also studied human resources management at York University's Schulich School of Business.[3]

As Crown counsel

Mendicino worked as a federal prosecutor for ten years, during which time he was involved in the handling of the Toronto 18 terrorism case.[4]

He also worked for the Law Society of Upper Canada, served as the president of the Association of Justice Counsel, and taught as an adjunct professor at Osgoode Hall Law School.[4]

Political career

Mendicino was occasional member of the Eglinton—Lawrence Liberal riding executive, and served as legal counsel to provincial Liberal candidate Mike Colle's campaign in 2014.

41st Canadian Parliament

Mendicino stood for the federal nomination for the 2015 general election. He faced a major battle for the nomination after Conservative MP Eve Adams crossed the floor to join the Liberal Party.[5] With the support of party leader Justin Trudeau, sought the Liberal nomination in Eglinton—Lawrence. Mendicino secured the support of former interim Liberal leader Bob Rae and nearby incumbent MP Judy Sgro.[4] He defeated Adams at the July 26, 2015, nomination meeting by 1,936 to 1,100 votes.[6]

In the general election, Mendicino faced the incumbent Conservative MP Joe Oliver, who was Minister of Finance, as well as a surprise New Democratic Party nominee in former Saskatchewan finance minister Andrew Thomson. Mendicino attacked Thomson as a parachute candidate.[7] Ultimately, Mendicino won the election.[8][9]

42rd Canadian Parliament

On January 30, 2017, Mendicino was appointed as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada serving under Jody Wilson-Raybould.

On August 31, 2018, he became Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities[10] serving under François-Philippe Champagne.

43rd Canadian Parliament

Mendicino was re-elected in the 2019 federal election and subsequently named Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship.[11]

44th Canadian Parliament

Mendicino was re-elected in the 2021 federal election, and made Minister of Public Safety on October 26.[12]

Emergencies Act

Minister Mendicino oversaw the first ever invocation of the Emergencies Act in response to the 2022 Freedom Convoy protests in February 2022.[13] Scrutiny from media and opposition followed regarding whether the use of the Act was necessary.

Media questioned whether law enforcement asked for the Act's use. This question stems from testimony on 26 April before the DEDC committee, in which he noted in response to a question from Bloc Quebecois MP Rheal Fortin that the government "invoked the act because it was the advice of non-partisan professional law enforcement that the existing authorities were ineffective at the time to restore public safety."[14][15] In response to questions from Liberal MP Rachel Bendayan he said:[16]

We invoked the act because it was the advice of non-partisan professional law enforcement that existing authorities were ineffective at the time to restore public safety at all of the ports of entry you mentioned.

Mendicino then addressed the media's questions surrounding cabinet confidence, and whether this provision would be lifted for the purposes of the public inquiry that is written into the Emergencies Act, called the Rouleau inquiry.[17]

On April 27, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the House of Commons that "police were clear that they needed tools not held by any federal, provincial or territorial law."[18]

On 19 May 2022 Shadow Minister for Emergency Preparedness Dane Lloyd asked Mendicino about the need for the invocation of the Emergencies Act and elicited the comment that the latter "stands by previous statements that the federal government invoked the Emergencies Act on the recommendation of law enforcement officials."[19]

On 11 May 2022 RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki stated under oath to the DEDC committee that "while her agency was consulted, it never requested nor recommended the [Emergency Act]'s use".[20] On 17 May the interim Ottawa police chief Steve Bell testified at PROC committee that at he did not request the invocation of the Emergencies Act from the government.[21][14][22][23] Another police service that was involved in the Freedom Convoy protests was the Ontario Provincial Police, and testimony on 24 March before the SECU committee from its commissioner Thomas Carrique led many to believe that Carrique made the request,[24][25] Mendicino clarified in testimony given to the SECU committee on 17 May when he prevaricated.[26]

Mendicino's Deputy Minister answered questions before the DEDC committee on 8 June, in which he testified that the minister "was misunderstood",[18] and on 14 June the Official Opposition called for Mendicino to resign.[27]

On 15 June before the DEDC committee, Minister for Emergency Preparedness Bill Blair and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland spoke to questions about recommendations from law enforcement to invoke the Emergencies Act. Minister Blair notes, "I’m not aware of any recommendation of law enforcement. Quite frankly, this is a decision of government." Deputy Prime Minister Freeland said "I would like to take the personal responsibility for that decision [to invoke the Emergencies Act], it was my opinion it was the correct decision," and "a last resort". DEDC committee co-chair Fortin was unable to get a direct answer to his questions about what steps the federal government tried taking before invoking the last resort. MP and committee co-chair Matthew Green repeatedly asked whether Freeland "took notes at high-level meetings she had with bank officials about the economic measures in the emergency declaration," and after getting no response during his allotted time for questions, a frustrated Green said "that is unreal."[28]

Electoral record

2019 Canadian federal election: Eglinton—Lawrence
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Marco Mendicino 29,850 53.3 +4.41 $86,046.25
Conservative Chani Aryeh-Bain 18,549 33.1 -10.14 $71,631.04
New Democratic Alexandra Nash 4,741 8.5 +2.12 $10,049.32
Green Reuben DeBoer 2,278 4.1 +3.27 $3,248.70
People's Michael Staffieri 586 1.0 - $5,424.02
Total valid votes/expense limit 56,004 100.0  
Total rejected ballots 394
Turnout 56,398
Eligible voters 82,811
Liberal hold Swing +4.41
Source: Elections Canada[29][30]
2015 Canadian federal election: Eglinton—Lawrence
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Marco Mendicino 27,278 48.89 +10.47 $155,849.60
Conservative Joe Oliver 23,788 42.64 -4.18 $183,256.52
New Democratic Andrew Thomson 3,505 6.28 -5.32 $114,205.95
Green Matthew Chisholm 799 1.43 -1.74 $217.60
Libertarian Ethan Buchman 308 0.55
Animal Alliance Rudy Brunell Solomonvici 114 0.20 $5,129.72
Total valid votes/expense limit 55,792 100.00   $210,250.86
Total rejected ballots 328 0.58
Turnout 56,120 72.45
Eligible voters 77,463
Liberal gain from Conservative Swing +7.32
Source: Elections Canada[31][32]


References

  1. ^ "Search For Contributions". Elections Canada. Retrieved 2021-06-23.
  2. ^ "Marco Mendicino, who beat Eve Adams to the nomination, on staying in Justin Trudeau's good books". Toronto Life. August 31, 2015.
  3. ^ Marco Mendicino LinkedIn Profile.
  4. ^ a b c Zilio, Michelle (July 26, 2015). "The man who defeated Eve Adams: Who is Marco Mendicino?". CTV News.
  5. ^ "Eve Adams, former Conservative MP, joins Liberal caucus". CBC News. February 9, 2015.
  6. ^ "Tory defector Eve Adams defeated by Marco Mendicino in Liberal nomination fight". National Post. Retrieved 2015-10-22.
  7. ^ Curry, Bill (August 14, 2015). "NDP recruits former Saskatchewan finance minister to run against Joe Oliver". The Globe & Mail.
  8. ^ Ngabo, Gilbert. "Liberal Marco Mendicino unseats finance minister Joe Oliver". Metro News. Retrieved 2015-10-22.
  9. ^ "Canada Votes". The Toronto Star. October 20, 2015. pp. GT13–GT15.
  10. ^ "Prime Minister announces changes to parliamentary secretaries". Prime Minister of Canada. August 31, 2018. Retrieved March 29, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  11. ^ "Marco Mendicino appointed new Canadian Immigration Minister". CIC News. 2019-11-20. Retrieved 2021-01-13.
  12. ^ MacCharles, Tonda; Ballingall, Alex (October 26, 2021). "Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stakes out his political future with new cabinet". The Toronto Star. ISSN 0319-0781. Retrieved February 7, 2022.
  13. ^ Aiello, Rachel (February 14, 2022). "Trudeau makes history, invokes Emergencies Act to address trucker protests". CTV News. Retrieved March 29, 2022.
  14. ^ a b Ritchie, Sarah (17 May 2022). "Ottawa's interim police chief didn't ask for Emergencies Act during Freedom Convoy". CBC. The Canadian Press.
  15. ^ Kirkup, Kristy; Marhnouj, Safiyah (26 April 2022). "Decision to invoke Emergencies Act based on law enforcement advice, says Marco Mendicino". The Globe and Mail Inc.
  16. ^ Wherry, Aaron (25 May 2022). "To understand Ottawa's use of the Emergencies Act, we need to know what cabinet knew". CBC.
  17. ^ Ritchie, Sarah (27 April 2022). "Emergencies Act inquiry 'could' get access to cabinet secrets, Marco Mendicino says". The Globe and Mail Inc.
  18. ^ a b Ritchie, Sarah (8 June 2022). "Mendicino was 'misunderstood' in saying police asked for Emergencies Act: deputy minister". CTV News an arm of BellMedia. Canadian Press.
  19. ^ Kirkup, Kristy; Carbert, Michelle (19 May 2022). "Public Safety Minister stands by statements that law enforcement recommended using Emergencies Act". The Globe and Mail Inc.
  20. ^ Benson, Stuart (11 May 2022). "RCMP neither requested nor planned for Emergencies Act powers, commissioner tells MPs, Senators". Hill Times Publishing.
  21. ^ Woods, Michael (17 May 2022). "No direct request for Emergencies Act from Ottawa police, interim chief says". BellMedia. CTV News.
  22. ^ Kirkup, Kristy; Spearchief-Morris, Joy (17 May 2022). "Ottawa Police did not make direct request for invocation of Emergencies Act, says interim chief". The Globe and Mail Inc.
  23. ^ Ritchie, Sarah (17 May 2022). "Ottawa interim police chief Steve Bell didn't ask feds to invoke Emergencies Act". BellMedia. CP24.
  24. ^ Ibrahim, Erika (24 March 2022). "Convoy protest was a national security threat, Ontario police boss says". Victoria Times Colonist Glacier Media Digital. The Canadian Press.
  25. ^ Boutilier, Alex (24 March 2022). "Committee examining Liberals' emergency powers debates scope of inquiry". Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
  26. ^ Ballingall, Alex (17 May 2022). "Public safety minister won't say if police asked for the Emergencies Act to help clear the trucker protests". Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd.
  27. ^ Raycraft, Richard (14 June 2022). "Questions about who wanted Emergencies Act deployed prompt Conservative calls for Mendicino to resign". CBC.
  28. ^ Ritchie, Sarah (15 June 2022). "Police did not ask for Emergencies Act: Emergency Preparedness Minister". Canada's National Observer. Canadian Press.
  29. ^ "List of confirmed candidates". Elections Canada. Retrieved October 4, 2019.
  30. ^ "Election Night Results". Elections Canada. Retrieved November 5, 2019.
  31. ^ Elections Canada – Confirmed candidates for Eglinton—Lawrence, 30 September 2015
  32. ^ Elections Canada – Final Candidates Election Expenses Limits

External links

  • Official site
  • Bio & mandate from the Prime Minister
  • Profile at Parliament of Canada
  • Marco Mendicino – Parliament of Canada biography
  • Speeches, votes and activity at OpenParliament.ca

marco, mendicino, italian, ˈmarko, mendiˈtʃiːno, born, july, 1973, canadian, politician, been, minister, public, safety, since, october, 2021, member, liberal, party, mendicino, represents, eglinton, lawrence, house, commons, sitting, member, parliament, since. Marco Mendicino PC MP Italian ˈmarko mendiˈtʃiːno born July 28 1973 is a Canadian politician who has been the Minister of Public Safety since October 26 2021 A member of the Liberal Party Mendicino represents Eglinton Lawrence in the House of Commons sitting as a member of Parliament MP since 2015 He was the Minister of Immigration Refugees and Citizenship from 2019 to 2021 The HonourableMarco MendicinoPC MPMendicino in October 2022Minister of Public SafetyIncumbentAssumed office April 30 2021Prime MinisterJustin TrudeauPreceded byBill BlairMinister of Immigration Refugees and CitizenshipIn office November 20 2019 October 26 2021Prime MinisterJustin TrudeauPreceded byAhmed HussenSucceeded bySean FraserParliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Infrastructure and CommunitiesIn office August 31 2018 November 20 2019MinisterFrancois Philippe ChampagnePreceded byMarc MillerParliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of CanadaIn office January 30 2017 August 30 2018MinisterJody Wilson RaybouldPreceded byBill BlairSucceeded byArif ViraniMember of Parliamentfor Eglinton LawrenceIncumbentAssumed office October 19 2015Preceded byJoe OliverPersonal detailsBorn 1973 07 28 July 28 1973 age 49 Toronto OntarioPolitical partyLiberalResidence s Bedford Park 1 Toronto Ontario CanadaAlma materCarleton UniversityUniversity of WindsorYork UniversityProfessionLawyerpolitician Contents 1 Early life 2 As Crown counsel 3 Political career 3 1 41st Canadian Parliament 3 2 42rd Canadian Parliament 3 3 43rd Canadian Parliament 3 4 44th Canadian Parliament 3 4 1 Emergencies Act 4 Electoral record 5 References 6 External linksEarly life EditMendicino was born to Italian immigrant parents 2 He studied political science at Carleton University before attending law school at the University of Windsor Later in his career he also studied human resources management at York University s Schulich School of Business 3 As Crown counsel EditMendicino worked as a federal prosecutor for ten years during which time he was involved in the handling of the Toronto 18 terrorism case 4 He also worked for the Law Society of Upper Canada served as the president of the Association of Justice Counsel and taught as an adjunct professor at Osgoode Hall Law School 4 Political career EditMendicino was occasional member of the Eglinton Lawrence Liberal riding executive and served as legal counsel to provincial Liberal candidate Mike Colle s campaign in 2014 41st Canadian Parliament Edit Mendicino stood for the federal nomination for the 2015 general election He faced a major battle for the nomination after Conservative MP Eve Adams crossed the floor to join the Liberal Party 5 With the support of party leader Justin Trudeau sought the Liberal nomination in Eglinton Lawrence Mendicino secured the support of former interim Liberal leader Bob Rae and nearby incumbent MP Judy Sgro 4 He defeated Adams at the July 26 2015 nomination meeting by 1 936 to 1 100 votes 6 In the general election Mendicino faced the incumbent Conservative MP Joe Oliver who was Minister of Finance as well as a surprise New Democratic Party nominee in former Saskatchewan finance minister Andrew Thomson Mendicino attacked Thomson as a parachute candidate 7 Ultimately Mendicino won the election 8 9 42rd Canadian Parliament Edit On January 30 2017 Mendicino was appointed as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada serving under Jody Wilson Raybould On August 31 2018 he became Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Infrastructure and Communities 10 serving under Francois Philippe Champagne 43rd Canadian Parliament Edit Mendicino was re elected in the 2019 federal election and subsequently named Minister of Immigration Refugees and Citizenship 11 44th Canadian Parliament Edit Mendicino was re elected in the 2021 federal election and made Minister of Public Safety on October 26 12 Emergencies Act Edit This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help to create a more balanced presentation Discuss and resolve this issue before removing this message October 2022 Minister Mendicino oversaw the first ever invocation of the Emergencies Act in response to the 2022 Freedom Convoy protests in February 2022 13 Scrutiny from media and opposition followed regarding whether the use of the Act was necessary Media questioned whether law enforcement asked for the Act s use This question stems from testimony on 26 April before the DEDC committee in which he noted in response to a question from Bloc Quebecois MP Rheal Fortin that the government invoked the act because it was the advice of non partisan professional law enforcement that the existing authorities were ineffective at the time to restore public safety 14 15 In response to questions from Liberal MP Rachel Bendayan he said 16 We invoked the act because it was the advice of non partisan professional law enforcement that existing authorities were ineffective at the time to restore public safety at all of the ports of entry you mentioned Mendicino then addressed the media s questions surrounding cabinet confidence and whether this provision would be lifted for the purposes of the public inquiry that is written into the Emergencies Act called the Rouleau inquiry 17 On April 27 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told the House of Commons that police were clear that they needed tools not held by any federal provincial or territorial law 18 On 19 May 2022 Shadow Minister for Emergency Preparedness Dane Lloyd asked Mendicino about the need for the invocation of the Emergencies Act and elicited the comment that the latter stands by previous statements that the federal government invoked the Emergencies Act on the recommendation of law enforcement officials 19 On 11 May 2022 RCMP Commissioner Brenda Lucki stated under oath to the DEDC committee that while her agency was consulted it never requested nor recommended the Emergency Act s use 20 On 17 May the interim Ottawa police chief Steve Bell testified at PROC committee that at he did not request the invocation of the Emergencies Act from the government 21 14 22 23 Another police service that was involved in the Freedom Convoy protests was the Ontario Provincial Police and testimony on 24 March before the SECU committee from its commissioner Thomas Carrique led many to believe that Carrique made the request 24 25 Mendicino clarified in testimony given to the SECU committee on 17 May when he prevaricated 26 Mendicino s Deputy Minister answered questions before the DEDC committee on 8 June in which he testified that the minister was misunderstood 18 and on 14 June the Official Opposition called for Mendicino to resign 27 On 15 June before the DEDC committee Minister for Emergency Preparedness Bill Blair and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland spoke to questions about recommendations from law enforcement to invoke the Emergencies Act Minister Blair notes I m not aware of any recommendation of law enforcement Quite frankly this is a decision of government Deputy Prime Minister Freeland said I would like to take the personal responsibility for that decision to invoke the Emergencies Act it was my opinion it was the correct decision and a last resort DEDC committee co chair Fortin was unable to get a direct answer to his questions about what steps the federal government tried taking before invoking the last resort MP and committee co chair Matthew Green repeatedly asked whether Freeland took notes at high level meetings she had with bank officials about the economic measures in the emergency declaration and after getting no response during his allotted time for questions a frustrated Green said that is unreal 28 Electoral record Editvte2019 Canadian federal election Eglinton LawrenceParty Candidate Votes ExpendituresLiberal Marco Mendicino 29 850 53 3 4 41 86 046 25Conservative Chani Aryeh Bain 18 549 33 1 10 14 71 631 04New Democratic Alexandra Nash 4 741 8 5 2 12 10 049 32Green Reuben DeBoer 2 278 4 1 3 27 3 248 70People s Michael Staffieri 586 1 0 5 424 02Total valid votes expense limit 56 004 100 0 Total rejected ballots 394Turnout 56 398Eligible voters 82 811Liberal hold Swing 4 41Source Elections Canada 29 30 vte2015 Canadian federal election Eglinton LawrenceParty Candidate Votes ExpendituresLiberal Marco Mendicino 27 278 48 89 10 47 155 849 60Conservative Joe Oliver 23 788 42 64 4 18 183 256 52New Democratic Andrew Thomson 3 505 6 28 5 32 114 205 95Green Matthew Chisholm 799 1 43 1 74 217 60Libertarian Ethan Buchman 308 0 55 Animal Alliance Rudy Brunell Solomonvici 114 0 20 5 129 72Total valid votes expense limit 55 792 100 00 210 250 86Total rejected ballots 328 0 58Turnout 56 120 72 45Eligible voters 77 463Liberal gain from Conservative Swing 7 32Source Elections Canada 31 32 References Edit Search For Contributions Elections Canada Retrieved 2021 06 23 Marco Mendicino who beat Eve Adams to the nomination on staying in Justin Trudeau s good books Toronto Life August 31 2015 Marco Mendicino LinkedIn Profile a b c Zilio Michelle July 26 2015 The man who defeated Eve Adams Who is Marco Mendicino CTV News Eve Adams former Conservative MP joins Liberal caucus CBC News February 9 2015 Tory defector Eve Adams defeated by Marco Mendicino in Liberal nomination fight National Post Retrieved 2015 10 22 Curry Bill August 14 2015 NDP recruits former Saskatchewan finance minister to run against Joe Oliver The Globe amp Mail Ngabo Gilbert Liberal Marco Mendicino unseats finance minister Joe Oliver Metro News Retrieved 2015 10 22 Canada Votes The Toronto Star October 20 2015 pp GT13 GT15 Prime Minister announces changes to parliamentary secretaries Prime Minister of Canada August 31 2018 Retrieved March 29 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Marco Mendicino appointed new Canadian Immigration Minister CIC News 2019 11 20 Retrieved 2021 01 13 MacCharles Tonda Ballingall Alex October 26 2021 Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stakes out his political future with new cabinet The Toronto Star ISSN 0319 0781 Retrieved February 7 2022 Aiello Rachel February 14 2022 Trudeau makes history invokes Emergencies Act to address trucker protests CTV News Retrieved March 29 2022 a b Ritchie Sarah 17 May 2022 Ottawa s interim police chief didn t ask for Emergencies Act during Freedom Convoy CBC The Canadian Press Kirkup Kristy Marhnouj Safiyah 26 April 2022 Decision to invoke Emergencies Act based on law enforcement advice says Marco Mendicino The Globe and Mail Inc Wherry Aaron 25 May 2022 To understand Ottawa s use of the Emergencies Act we need to know what cabinet knew CBC Ritchie Sarah 27 April 2022 Emergencies Act inquiry could get access to cabinet secrets Marco Mendicino says The Globe and Mail Inc a b Ritchie Sarah 8 June 2022 Mendicino was misunderstood in saying police asked for Emergencies Act deputy minister CTV News an arm of BellMedia Canadian Press Kirkup Kristy Carbert Michelle 19 May 2022 Public Safety Minister stands by statements that law enforcement recommended using Emergencies Act The Globe and Mail Inc Benson Stuart 11 May 2022 RCMP neither requested nor planned for Emergencies Act powers commissioner tells MPs Senators Hill Times Publishing Woods Michael 17 May 2022 No direct request for Emergencies Act from Ottawa police interim chief says BellMedia CTV News Kirkup Kristy Spearchief Morris Joy 17 May 2022 Ottawa Police did not make direct request for invocation of Emergencies Act says interim chief The Globe and Mail Inc Ritchie Sarah 17 May 2022 Ottawa interim police chief Steve Bell didn t ask feds to invoke Emergencies Act BellMedia CP24 Ibrahim Erika 24 March 2022 Convoy protest was a national security threat Ontario police boss says Victoria Times Colonist Glacier Media Digital The Canadian Press Boutilier Alex 24 March 2022 Committee examining Liberals emergency powers debates scope of inquiry Global News a division of Corus Entertainment Inc Ballingall Alex 17 May 2022 Public safety minister won t say if police asked for the Emergencies Act to help clear the trucker protests Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd Raycraft Richard 14 June 2022 Questions about who wanted Emergencies Act deployed prompt Conservative calls for Mendicino to resign CBC Ritchie Sarah 15 June 2022 Police did not ask for Emergencies Act Emergency Preparedness Minister Canada s National Observer Canadian Press List of confirmed candidates Elections Canada Retrieved October 4 2019 Election Night Results Elections Canada Retrieved November 5 2019 Elections Canada Confirmed candidates for Eglinton Lawrence 30 September 2015 Elections Canada Final Candidates Election Expenses LimitsExternal links EditOfficial site Bio amp mandate from the Prime Minister Profile at Parliament of Canada Marco Mendicino Parliament of Canada biography Speeches votes and activity at OpenParliament ca Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marco Mendicino amp oldid 1133844943, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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