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Canadian Premier Sues Trudeau over Emergencies Act Use: 'There Is No Insurrection'

Alberta Premier Jason Kenney warns prime minister abused authority

 on 21st February 2022 @ 3.00pm
canadian prime minister justin trudeau used the emergencies acts to break up protests against his policies © press
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau used the Emergencies Acts to break up protests against his policies

The premier of Alberta is suing Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over allegations the liberal leader abused his authorities to stop peaceful protests against his policies.

Premier Jason Kenney announced he is filing a lawsuit against the federal government of Canada and PM Trudeau for their use of the Emergencies Act.

Kenney slammed the move in a statement, calling it “unjustified in the circumstances.”

During an interview with Alberta-based Edmonton Sun, Kenney said he was filing a legal challenge in Canadian federal court in order to suspend Trudeau and the liberal government’s implementation of the act.

Trudeau is accused of abusing the act to crack down on the “Freedom Convoy” protest currently ongoing in the nation’s capital of Ottawa.

Protesters are peacefully calling for an end to Trudeau's overreaching mandates and restrictions on public freedoms.

premier jason kenney is suing the federal government over the alleged abuses © press
Premier Jason Kenney is suing the federal government over the alleged abuses

Kenney made clear that he still wanted law and order restored, and did not want to be misconstrued. 

"The situation in Ottawa is serious,” said Kenney.

"Law and order has to be restored."

He continued by adding that he believed protestors should not be able to blockade the center of any city, much less the nation’s capital, for any reason or cause.

"But the Emergencies Act was designed to come into effect at the failure of the state,” in the event of a coup or insurrection that threatened to topple Canada’s democratic institutions.

"However, there is no insurrection or coup,” he said.

The Edmonton Sun reported that the Ottawa Police Department has always had the authority to ticket, and even to arrest, drivers who are parked illegally.

"Police services already have all the powers they need through provincial authority," Kenney said.

"All the tools already exist,” he added, pointing out that both the blockades of the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor, Ontario and the U.S.-Canada border crossing in Coutts, Alberta, were resolved by the ordinary conduct of police.

Neither situation required extraneous powers like the Emergencies Act. 

"Let’s stick to the basics here — the basics of law enforcement,” Kenney said.

Kenney took particular issue with the coercive measures imposed on financial institutions by the federal government.

Those parts of the Emergencies Act that have to do with banking were “designed to interrupt terrorism financing,” said Kenney, but they are instead being used to “seize and freeze” the assets of “people whose opinions they disagree with.”

The Canadian government has already begun cracking down on the finances of Freedom Convoy supporters.

A number of bank accounts connected to the protests have been frozen by their financial institutions after referrals from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, as previously reported by Neon Nettle.

The RCMP has additionally ordered freezes on transactions from 34 cryptocurrency wallets connected to the demonstrations, as well as th GoFundMe and GiveSendGo fundraisers created to support the Freedom Convoy.  

If Trudeau and his allies were allowed to continue using their Emergencies Act powers to crack down on political dissent, “it sets a very dangerous precedent,” Kenney said.

trudeau s government used the emergencies act to send police forces in to break up the protests © press
Trudeau's government used the Emergencies Act to send police forces in to break up the protests

Kenney also took issue with Trudeau’s personal conduct during the protests.

He told the Edmonton Sun that during a teleconference with provincial leaders last week, six of the ten premiers pleaded with Trudeau not to invoke the Emergencies Act, but Trudeau did it anyway.

Trudeau also “provoked” the truckers by implementing the cross-border mandate. 

“There was no defensible medical reason to require them to be vaccinated,” said Kenney.

Then Trudeau made things worse by vilifying the protestors as a fringe minority, and as racists and sexists.

Kenney said he did not expect other provinces to join the suit, but he hoped they would.

[RELATED] Canadian Protesters Blast Trudeau's Crackdown: 'These Very Powers Are Why We're Here'

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tags: Protest | Lawsuit
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