Medicine Hat News

Some members of Parliament, ministers assigned police protection as security tightens

- MIA RABSON

A Conservati­ve MP whose Toronto office was vandalized this week is among several federal politician­s now under visible police protection on Parliament Hill.

Melissa Lantsman’s Thornhill office was plastered with anti-Israel posters overnight Wednesday, including one warning “the Jews of Thornhill” that history is watching how they respond to the Israel-Hamas conflict.

In recent weeks, Lantsman has also been seen with a protective detail on Parliament Hill.

A Conservati­ve official confirmed that the deputy Conservati­ve leader has RCMP protection, but did not say why.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh has been surrounded by RCMP officers both in Ottawa and elsewhere, including at the recent New Democrat caucus retreat in Edmonton.

NDP spokeswoma­n Alana Cahill would provide no details about what precipitat­ed the need.

“All I can say is we follow the recommenda­tions that are provided to us.”

Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly has regularly been spotted with protection of late. Earlier this year, anti-Israel protesters appeared outside her Montreal home.

Emergency Preparedne­ss Minister Harjit Sajjan has also been closely flanked by police, who even accompanie­d him right up to the door of the cabinet room this week.

Sajjan has previously discussed a number of threats made against him, including in his pre-political life in the military and as a Vancouver police detective. But this week, he would not discuss why he is currently being offered a protective detail.

“I am well-protected,” Sajjan said Tuesday in response to a question about his security. “We have a good system here in Canada to protect ministers.”

While Trudeau and the Governor General are given permanent protective details, other MPs, cabinet ministers, senators and party leaders receive protection on a “case-by-case basis,” the RCMP said Thursday in response to questions from The Canadian Press.

But those cases are mounting, as is the budget to handle them.

Data provided by the RCMP show it cost $2.5 million to provide protection for parliament­arians, excluding the prime minister, between April 1 and Dec. 31 of last year.

That is already 40 per cent more than the $1.8 million budget in the full year before that, and 86 per cent more than the $1.4 million spent in 2021-22.

“Protective measures are intelligen­celed and based on the latest risk and threat assessment­s, ongoing security considerat­ions and a number of other factors,” the RCMP said.

“For the safety of those we protect and of our members, as well as to ensure the integrity of operations, the RCMP does not disclose informatio­n related to protective measures, nor confirm individual­s who may receive protection.”

Threats against politician­s have become more common and more serious in recent years.

On Feb. 7, RCMP charged a man in Montreal for allegedly threatenin­g to kill Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

 ?? CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK ?? Conservati­ve Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman speaks in the House of Commons on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO SEAN KILPATRICK Conservati­ve Deputy Leader Melissa Lantsman speaks in the House of Commons on Tuesday.

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