In Tense Ethics Hearing, Conservatives Say Brookfield
Partnered With Vancouver Condo Developer 15 Days Before Carney's Bailout — and
Call Brookfield as a Witness
By Sam Cooper, July 7, 2026
- The Bureau thebureau@substack.com
OTTAWA — In a contentious ethics committee, Conservative MP
Aaron Gunn moved Tuesday to summon Vancouver condo marketer Bob Rennie, federal
Housing Minister Gregor Robertson, and major developers connected to Rennie’s
fundraiser for Mark Carney as witnesses in an urgent parliamentary
investigation of the Prime Minister’s multibillion-dollar British Columbia
condo bailout. A second Conservative, Gabriel Hardy, then walked the committee
through a timeline that ended on the most pointed suggestion of the hearing.
Hardy asserted that Brookfield — the asset-management giant
Carney chaired before entering politics — became co-owner in a deal with
Concert Properties, a developer holding dozens of condo projects in the Burnaby
glut zone, fifteen days before the bailout was announced.
Gunn’s motion, put to the Standing Committee on Access to
Information, Privacy and Ethics, calls for no fewer than six meetings this
summer into what the governments have styled the Canada–British Columbia
partnership on condo conversion — the June 18 plan to buy more than 2,200
unsold Vancouver-region condominiums with public funds.
The witness list reaches from the political architects to
the industry’s commanding heights: former Vancouver mayor and now Carney
housing minister Gregor Robertson; British Columbia Housing Minister Christine
Boyle; Vancouver Mayor Ken Sim; Rennie, whom the motion identifies as the
figure “often called Vancouver’s Condo King”; Duncan Wlodarczak, chair of the
Liberal Party of Canada in British Columbia and chief of staff at Onni Group,
one of the province’s largest developers; the Urban Development Institute;
Concert Properties; and Brookfield Asset Management. The motion further demands
that both governments produce any agreement between them on the condo program,
and any agreement between either government and any developer or lender,
immediately upon finalization.
Gunn’s motion would put the bailout’s contracts — which
developers, which units, at what price — before Parliament as they are signed,
answering the questions the governments have so far declined to address.
It asserts that Carney’s plan would “bail out developers,
bankers, and investors by using taxpayer dollars,” that it “will not make
housing more affordable, but will prevent a price correction from taking place,
preserving high prices for developers rather than lowering them for British
Columbians trying to enter the housing market,” that “forcing home buyers to
compete with their own tax dollars while raising housing prices for the benefit
of developers is not in the interest of Canadians.”
The Liberals, he said, “never campaigned on spending more
than a billion dollars in taxpayer money to give a handout to their wealthy
developer friends.” The plan, he argued, means developers “wouldn’t have to
lower prices and God forbid sell at a loss,” and raises “some pretty obvious
ethical questions that I think deserve answers — such as, if the Liberals
didn’t campaign on this policy, why are they suddenly deciding to pursue it
now? Whose idea was it? Who lobbied for it? Is this being planned for more Canadian
cities? And maybe most importantly, which well-connected developers, big banks
and foreign investors stand to benefit the most?”
“I also have to point out how insane the generational
inequity of this policy truly is,” Gunn added. “Handing out huge sums of money
to developers who have made billions over the past 20 years, paid for with tax
dollars by those who are still trying to enter the housing market for the very
first time. It is yet another generational transfer of wealth that creates no
new units of housing while rewarding those who built and priced condos that
nobody could afford.”
Conservative member Gabriel Hardy followed, pressing the
case for urgency before the money moves.
The announcement came June 18, two days before Parliament
adjourned, for the purchase of 2,200 unsold condominiums at a per-unit cost
Hardy placed near $660,000.
Hardy then laid out the timeline, beginning with the Rennie
fundraiser The Bureau has reported on. “An evening with Carney,” he told the
committee. “It cost $1,750 to meet Mark Carney, the prime minister of Canada,
in his office. No journalists — that’s often what happens, no journalists,
behind closed doors. Don’t worry, our prime minister is full of virtue. But 17
main developers were there. And they all have one thing in common: thousands of
condos unsold.” That was February 2026, Hardy said. In March 2026, he
continued, a BC Housing document speaks to a meeting involving British
Columbia’s housing minister. In May 2026, the Canada Mortgage and Housing
Corporation reported a 76 percent surge in unsold completed condos in Metro
Vancouver — concentrated, Hardy stressed, in Burnaby and Richmond. “Remember
that,” he said, “because it’s important.”
Then came June 3. “Brookfield becomes co-owner” in a deal
with Concert Properties involving eight industrial properties, Hardy told the
committee — and he was careful with the distinction: “Just to be clear, the
co-ownership is not for condos with Concert Properties.” But Concert, he noted,
“has projects in the region, including 50 in Burnaby. Fifty condo buildings in
Burnaby.” Fifteen days later came the bailout announcement. “For Brookfield, 15
days before the announcement, they are becoming co-owners with this condo
company with thousands of condos that haven’t been sold,” Hardy said. “And then
all of a sudden there’s announcements in cities and sectors that would interest
Brookfield and in which Brookfield has made investments. Should we investigate?
Yes.”
That, Hardy said, is why Concert Properties was named in the
motion. “Concert Properties, who created a partnership with Brookfield 15 days
before the announcement, will be among the developers from whom the government
will be purchasing these condos in the fall. These are just facts. They’re not
presumptions. They’re not accusations.” The prime minister, he noted, has said
developers did not request the program from him directly.
Hardy then turned to the prime minister’s ethics screen —
the conflict-of-interest wall meant to separate Carney from decisions touching
Brookfield. The screen, Hardy told the committee, has been “activated 17 times.
So, these are direct employees of the prime minister who trigger this screen. So,
there are potential conflicts of interest.” The committee, he said, had shared
eight documents on potential conflicts involving the prime minister. “For a
year — and I’ve been here for a year — we’re seeing that things are shady with
the prime minister,” Hardy said. He offered a pattern he said kept recurring:
“The prime minister often finds a way to be involved in everything. And I’ll
give an example. In Mirabel, there was an announcement for planes. 28 days
earlier, Brookfield became co-owners of a business that needed planes
desperately in Mirabel. The committee hadn’t been able to ask questions on
that, because every time that we table a motion, we’re told that we’re
conspiracy theorists.”
That, he said, is why Brookfield Asset Management sits on
the witness list: “One might wonder — is it actually a coincidence that
Brookfield is always around? These questions are legitimate, and we need to
receive answers.” The government members, he said, “are doing everything that
they can so that we don’t move forward... We were able to work in a certain way
before they became a majority. And now, since they have the majority, they are
ensuring that these investigations don’t happen.”
“Make no mistake,” New Democrat Jenny Kwan, appearing at the
committee, added. “It is a bailout for developers, even though the prime
minister wants to pass it off as affordable housing. No one is buying it. The
prime minister admitted as much at the announcement. He said, quote,
‘Developers are stuck.’”
Kwan said she rarely agrees with her Conservative
colleagues, but backs the argument for an ethics probe in this case. Carney’s
framing of the plan, she said, “sounds like a board member from Brookfield
Asset Management, rather than the prime minister.”
The government side’s response, through the meeting’s
opening stretch, came as procedure rather than argument.
Before Gunn had finished reading his motion’s clauses,
Liberal member Bardish Chagger raised points of order over the French
translation of the motion and its distribution; further interventions
questioned the speaking order and the room’s audio, forcing Gunn to restart his
reading repeatedly. The chair, Conservative John Brassard, said “I know what
you’re doing here. I know what you’re doing to disrupt the meeting and that’s
fine. You can continue it because people are watching.”
One of the new Liberal members, Wade Chang — who intervened
early Tuesday on the speaking order — represents Burnaby Central, part of the
region where the unsold-condo glut is concentrated.
The witnesses Gunn seeks sit at the center of the proximity
pattern The Bureau has documented. Rennie hosted “An Evening with Mark Carney”
at his Vancouver offices in February — a fundraiser whose Elections Canada
filing lists 146 attendees paying up to $1,775 each, among them at least 17 of
the province’s leading developers and former premier Christy Clark. A number of
those developers hold unsold inventory in the Vancouver region’s glut — the
same distressed stock the program proposes to buy. British Columbia government
records show a briefing note headed “Rennie Meeting” was opened for Premier
David Eby’s office in the same month. On a Postmedia panel in March 2025,
Rennie said he was “working with Carney” on a plan to let foreign buyers back
into the condo market through a federally backstopped rental pool.
More to come.
I have observed on Facebook and in my columns, that Carney
has not appeared to have behaved ethically in his position as Prime Minister. The evidence seems clear from the extensive documentation
by blogger Youtuber “moose on the loose”, that on many occasions, Brookfield becomes
better positioned to take advantage of private investments, soon after the Prime
Minister has travelled and signed a new MOU (memorandum of understanding).
Some have exclaimed that Carney is a financial liar and
crook. Liberal voices answer back, saying
such allegations are merely extreme partisanship without evidence. The legacy media has also done its part to
never discuss or shut down any conversations about the appearance of many conflicts
of interest by Carney in the last year.
Of great importance to the economic future of BC and Alberta,
the announcement of another pipeline to the coast was welcomed. However, the caveats of the need for decarbonized
oil in order to get approval, again placed Brookfield in the centre of such investment
requirements.
There seems to be far too much economic activity generally
prepositioning Brookfield over the last year, for it to be mere smart business.

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