Alberta Premier Smith says UCP paying for possible defamation lawsuit against CBC
Posted Apr 5, 2023 6:31 am.
Alberta Premier Danielle Smith says her United Conservative Party is paying for legal actions against the CBC, which the Opposition NDP says raises the question of whether the government rejected pursuing the lawsuit.
Smith, asked by reporters in Calgary on Tuesday who was funding the legal action, replied “the party” and did not elaborate.
Her office did not immediately respond to follow-up questions about why the party would fund the legal action that concerns Smith in her role as premier.
Party spokesman Dave Prisco also did not immediately respond to a request for clarification on why the UCP had agreed to pay the bill.
On Sunday, a notice of defamation letter sent from lawyers on behalf of Smith called on the CBC to retract and apologize for a January story.
The story stated a member of her staff sent emails to the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service challenging how it was handling court cases from COVID-19 protests at the United States-Canada border crossing at Coutts, Alta.
Smith has said a review found no evidence of contact between her office and the prosecution service. The CBC has said it stands by its reporting.
Read More: Danielle Smith says she will no longer speak on COVID prosecutor controversy
A week ago, the NDP released a phone call recording of Smith discussing with Calgary street pastor Artur Pawlowski his looming criminal trial related to his involvement with the Coutts blockade.
Smith is heard offering to make inquiries on Pawlowski’s behalf, revealing to him internal government arguments over case direction and telling him that the charges against him are rooted in political bias. She also said she was reminding prosecutors “almost weekly” about her concerns about pursuing such cases.
Smith has refused to answer questions from reporters about the call, citing the possible lawsuit against CBC.
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Opposition NDP Leader Rachel Notley said Tuesday that during her time as premier, there was insurance to cover legal costs for cabinet ministers in the course of their work.
Notley said it’s possible those tasked with weighing the merits of Smith’s possible lawsuit came out against paying for it, forcing Smith to look elsewhere.
“It’s very possible that the people who run that fund within the Government of Alberta and within the Ministry of Attorney General don’t actually think that this is a particularly valid legal strategy for the premier, and (that) it’s not a problem that she ran into by virtue of doing her appropriate job as the premier,” said Notley.
“Rather, (Smith) ran offside in a way that is unprecedented and unacceptable, and so the only way that this lawsuit can even be pursued is if she goes to UCP donors and asks them to pay.”
Notley said the other option is that Smith deliberately went outside the government to pursue the case.
“If (Smith) believed that she was truly the victim of defamation as a result of doing her job as premier, that (government insurance) is a fund they could have gone to,” said Notley.
“But when that happens, you’re not hiring the lawyers. The public service is hiring the lawyers, and the lawyers are giving the advice that the law would suggest they give.
“But because, I would argue, the premier is so offside with the law, she is instead going to a partisan source of funding so that she can use this legal action as a political tactic, not as a genuine legal claim.”
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The NDP has called for an independent investigation to determine what happened and whether Smith, as premier, contacted other accused to discuss their cases.
Legal experts have said Smith’s call with Pawlowski represents a profound violation of the democratic convention that there must be a firewall to separate politicians from the day-to-day decision-making of cases before the courts.
The notice of defamation letter gives the CBC until April 28 to retract its article and apologize or face potential further legal action, which would be just days before an expected writ drop for a provincial election scheduled for May 29.
Smith has long been critical of COVID-19 masking, gathering and vaccine mandate rules, questioning whether the measures were needed to fight the pandemic. She had promised to seek pardons for protesters of COVID-19 health restrictions.
After becoming premier, she said she learned she does not have the power to grant pardons.