Jim Bronskill
Reporter for The Canadian Press
About Jim Bronskill
Bill to create spy oversight committee introduced in House of Commons
The legislation would authorize a security-cleared committee of seven MPs and two senators to scrutinize the intelligence work of more than a dozen agencies.
Privacy commissioner wants to put brakes on info czar's planned new power
Daniel Therrien says proposed authority for information commissioner Suzanne Legault to order the release of information should not include files that deal with personal details.
Ministerial veto could trump information czar's planned new powers
The notion the Liberals would even raise the possibility of a ministerial override alarmed the British Columbia Freedom of Information and Privacy Association: "We think this is a bad idea."
Liberals issue openness directive, scrap most access to information fees
The Liberal government is immediately waiving all fees associated with access to information requests — apart from the $5 application charge.
Trudeau offers full federal assistance to fire-stricken Fort McMurray
Canada is a country of people who help each other in challenging times, Trudeau told his caucus Wednesday.
Canada Revenue Agency mailed SIN numbers to wrong people — twice: MP
A New Democrat MP says the Canada Revenue Agency twice mailed batches of private information — including names and social insurance numbers — to the wrong people in his riding.
Anti-money laundering agency fines Canadian bank $1.1 million
The federal anti−money laundering agency has levied a $1.1−million penalty against an unnamed Canadian bank for failing to report a suspicious transaction and various money transfers.
Social media skepticism helping fuel distrust of the internet, survey finds
A new global survey suggests distrust of the internet is being fuelled by growing skepticism of social-media services like Facebook and Twitter.
Visiting Canadians to Communist countries enlisted for Cold War intelligence effort: study
Canada enlisted citizens who travelled to Communist countries during the Cold War to gather needed intelligence — a shadowy element of a little-known government program detailed in a newly declassified history.