After months and months of delay, the government has finally unveiled the ad hoc panel that will examine the Winnipeg Lab documents, and that panel will comprise of four MPs and three former judges—two former Supreme Court of Canada justices, and one from the Federal Court of Appeal. Allegedly it took so long to set up because they needed to convince the judges, and then it took forever to get the Bloc and finally the Conservatives on board.
The make-up of the ad hoc panel to examine the Winnipeg Lab documents has finally been released. This should have been wholly unnecessary if they just let NSICOP do its job.
Prepare for this to be a damp squib, if you’ve read any of the reporting from @withfilesfrom. #cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/RYS6lUjgyJ— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) May 17, 2023
Of course, this whole exercise is completely unnecessary because this should have all been done by NSICOP. This is exactly the kind of thing that it was created for, but the Conservatives have been bad actors about this entire affair (and Michael Chong being among the worst of said bad actors), turning this whole thing into a needlessly drawn-out affair that has involved the government suing the House of Commons over a production order, and years of absolutely unhinged conspiracy theories as to what happened (again, with Chong being among the worst offenders).
I can pretty much guarantee you that this committee is going to find nothing to write home about. There has been plenty of reporting as to what happened. It wasn’t Chinese espionage. It was almost certainly a policy breach related to intellectual property, but this being a highly secured facility, you can imagine that has complicated matters. In any case, this whole thing is going to wind up being one giant waste of everyone’s time and resources because they decided to make a dog and pony show out of it for the sake of trying to embarrass the government rather than being responsible and just letting NSICOP read the unredacted documents that were provided to them in the first place.
Ukraine Dispatch:
There have been more early-morning missiles fired at Kyiv, and falling debris has set fire to one non-residential building, while at least one person was killed in a missile strike on Odessa. While Ukrainian forces continue to make gains around Bakhmut, the Russians are still sending people into the fighting, and there doesn’t appear to be any ammunition shortage, in spite of those Wagner Group videos.
https://twitter.com/ukraine_world/status/1658751950165356544
https://twitter.com/ukraine_world/status/1658800755946528774
"It's gonna be legen… wait for it… dary!"
Barney StinsonTotal combat losses of the enemy from February 24, 2022 to May 17, 2023: pic.twitter.com/QVxHrnC7my
— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) May 17, 2023