$912M Canada Student Service Grant. Sole-source contract to a Kielburger-linked foundation. Trudeau family speaking-fee ledger. Morneau Kenya/Ecuador trip. Three committee inquiries. Trudeau IV Ethics finding. Wind-down of Canadian operations. The full record is on file.
Brothers Marc Kielburger and Craig Kielburger founded Free The Children in 1995 (Craig was 12 years old), an international child-rights advocacy charity. The organisation was rebranded around 2016 as WE Charity, with substantial growth in school-fundraiser programmes, "WE Day" arena events, and overseas development projects (Kenya, Ecuador, Sierra Leone, etc.).
A separate for-profit sister entity, ME to WE Social Enterprise Inc., sold consumer goods (chocolate, beaded jewellery, branded apparel) under the WE brand. The structure — charity + commercial arm sharing a brand and overlapping management — later became central to FINA and ETHI committee questioning about whether the entities were truly arms-length. A further entity, WE Charity Foundation, held real-estate assets and was the legal counterparty to the 2020 CSSG contract.
In April 2020, the federal government announced the Canada Student Service Grant (CSSG): a programme to pay Canadian post-secondary students for COVID-period volunteer work. The total federal envelope was approximately $912 million. The administration contract was awarded sole-sourced to WE Charity Foundation on or about 22 April 2020. The contract counterparty was specifically the WE Charity Foundation legal entity, distinct from WE Charity proper — a structural choice that became central to subsequent committee questioning.
SRC: Privy Council Office records; FINA committee testimony; OGGO committee evidencePublic-service witnesses testified before FINA and OGGO that the CSSG concept moved from Cabinet through Employment and Social Development Canada (ESDC) and Privy Council Office channels. Multiple witnesses, including senior public servants, testified that WE Charity was identified by name early in the process. Whether the procurement-policy "sole-source" path was properly justified is the question the committees pursued. The Privy Council Clerk Ian Shugart testified at FINA on the procurement timeline.
SRC: FINA committee evidence July–August 2020; OGGO committee evidencePublic-record figures placed on the parliamentary file by WE Charity itself, in response to FINA committee Order Paper questions and ETHI committee inquiry, show payments to members of the Trudeau family for speaking and event-hosting work over multiple years preceding the 2020 contract.
| Recipient | Role at WE | Approx. payment (CAD) | Approx. events |
|---|---|---|---|
| Margaret Trudeau (mother) | speaker / WE Day appearances | ~$250,000 | ~28 |
| Alexandre Trudeau (brother) | speaker | ~$32,000 | ~8 |
| Sophie Grégoire Trudeau (spouse, then-PM) | WE-related podcast host (no fee for podcast) | expenses only | n/a |
Justin Trudeau himself was not paid by WE. The ETHI committee testimony established that the PM was aware members of his family had appeared at WE events. The point on the public record is the existence and structure of the payment relationship — not an imputation that the PM personally received funds.
In 2017, then-Finance Minister Bill Morneau and his family travelled to Kenya and Ecuador to visit WE-affiliated development projects. WE paid for substantial portions of the family travel. Morneau testified before FINA in July 2020 about the trips and subsequently repaid approximately $41,366 to WE that the public record showed had been paid by WE on the family's behalf in 2017.
SRC: FINA committee evidence July 2020; Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner findingsIn May 2021 the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion released the Trudeau IV report (and an associated Morneau II report). The Commissioner found that Morneau had breached the Conflict of Interest Act: specifically, sections relating to the use of his position to further another person's private interest in connection with the WE Kenya travel and the CSSG decision. The Commissioner cleared then-PM Trudeau personally on the CSSG question (no breach of the COIA was found at the PM level).
SRC: Office of the Conflict of Interest and Ethics Commissioner, Trudeau IV report and Morneau II report (2021)On 17 August 2020, Bill Morneau resigned from cabinet and from his Toronto Centre seat. The official framing was a transition to seek a position at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). His resignation followed weeks of FINA committee testimony in which his recollection of payment timelines, recusal from cabinet decisions on the CSSG, and family-travel disclosures were challenged on the parliamentary record.
SRC: HoC Hansard 17 August 2020; FINA committee evidence; Morneau public statementsThree House of Commons standing committees inquired into the CSSG / WE matter in July–August 2020. Witnesses included the Kielburger brothers, the PM, the then-Deputy PM and Finance Minister, the Privy Council Clerk, and senior public servants from ESDC and PCO.
The committee-evidence record is publicly searchable on the House of Commons committees portal (ourcommons.ca/Committees). Documentary disclosures by WE (the redacted contracts, ME to WE financials, and trip expense receipts) were filed on the parliamentary record.
On 3 July 2020, after several weeks of media reporting and rising parliamentary pressure, WE Charity announced it was withdrawing from the CSSG administration contract; the federal government cancelled the contract the same day. The CSSG programme itself did not run as a sustained federal programme.
On 9 September 2020, WE Charity announced the wind-down of its Canadian operations and a redistribution of its remaining Canadian charitable assets. Operations in some other jurisdictions continued. The Kielburger brothers subsequently filed multiple defamation suits against Canadian media outlets that had covered the matter. As of the date of this dossier some of those suits remain in active litigation; status is the appropriate place for an updated tracker, not a closed claim.
Editorial framing.
The Ethics Commissioner cleared the PM personally on the CSSG matter (no COIA breach at the PM level). The structural questions the parliamentary record raises do not depend on overturning that finding. They are:
Editorial framing.
This page does not assert that any named individual has committed a criminal offence within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court or the Criminal Code of Canada. It does not assert that the WE family-payment ledger is illegal — private charities may pay speakers, and that fact alone is not a violation. It does not assert that the Ethics Commissioner findings were wrongly decided. It asserts only what the parliamentary and Ethics Commissioner records contain: the contract award, the Trudeau-family payment ledger, the Morneau Kenya/Ecuador travel, the Morneau repayment, the resignation, the COIA breach finding (Morneau), the no-breach finding (Trudeau, on CSSG), the contract cancellation, and the WE wind-down of Canadian operations.