Rahim Jaffer first arrived on Parliament Hill in 1997 as a 25-year-old MP for Edmonton Strathcona. He was, at the time, the first Muslim to be elected to Canada's House of Commons. Bilingual, charming and sharp dresser, he represented the kind of face that the still struggling Reform Party wanted to showcase as it worked its way through the transformations to the Conservative Party of Canada and, eventually, to government in 2006.
Jaffer, though, would never be picked by Harper to go into cabinet. Part of the problem for Jaffer on that front was a simple numbers game. Harper had a wealth of talented MPs from Alberta but only so many could end up in cabinet. In that first Harper cabinet, it would Rona Ambrose from Edmonton, Jim Prentice from Calgary, and Monte Solberg from southern Alberta.
Jaffer would be named by Harper to be the chairman of the National Conservative Caucus, traditionally an important position within the party that is supposed to be the liason between the prime minister and his caucus.
But in the 2008 general election, Jaffer would lose his seat to the NDP's Linda Duncan, who won in an upset victory. Over two general elections — in 2006 and 2008, Jaffer would be the only Conservative incumbent in Alberta to lose his seat. Harper and many other Conservatives were disappointed, to say the least, and many blamed Jaffer who, party sources say, believed he ran a poor local campaign.
On the day after he lost, Jaffer married Helena Guergis, his fellow MP, who would go on to become a minister of state for Harper only to be fired by the prime minister on April 9 for allegations the PMO still will not discuss.
In the wake of Guergis' firing, new revelations emerged about Jaffer's life after politics and, this afternoon at 3:30 p.m., Jaffer will testify in front of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Government Operations about revelations he may have had improper contact with his former political colleagues to further his private business interests. There are also suggestions — denied by Guergis — that Jaffer used the government resources supplied to his wife to conduct his own business.
Newfoundland Liberal MP Siobhan Coady will lead off the questioning in today's committee meeting.
“Certainly, [today] is about my opinions about public trust and we have had serious allegations over the last number of weeks and months,” Coady said. “There has been a lot of speculation about what is occurring, so … when Mr. Jaffer appears before committee, I want to ask him questions that have to do with: who did he speak with, what kinds of discussions has he had, how far did he go with those discussions. I think it is a responsibility as a parliamentarian to get to the bottom of these issues, to ask him questions about what happened, who did he speak with, how did things occur, and that is the line of questions that I will be bringing forward tomorrow.”
Liberal MP Mark Holland may also put some questions to Jaffer.
” I think the question that needs to be asked is what was Mr. Jaffer up to? What proposals did he put in front of the government? Did he try to seek government cash, as has been alleged, for different projects? Was his wife, then a cabinet minister aware of this? Other than the letter that was written, was she pumping anything else? What she helping to try to make a personal profit for Mr. Jaffer? And if her – his wife was aware, did she report that to the Prime Minister? What conversations did she have with other ministers about the private personal interests of Mr. Jaffer?”
The proceedings will be televised beginning at 3:30 pm and should run until about 5:30 pm.