A conservative Canadian politician has opened what he’s calling a ‘conversation that matters” with the launch of the Allison Inquiry into Covid vaccine injuries. Niagara West MP Dean Allison is asking the public to come forward with their stories and send them to his personal website.
The Inquiry will hold public hearings from 8-11 September, giving vaccine-injured Canadians a platform they have been denied. “Canadians deserve transparency, Canadians deserve accountability, and above all, Canadians deserve to know their experiences matter,” Allison said at the recent launch.
The push comes after what Allison described as years of constituents telling him they felt “unheard” and were “struggling to navigate support systems,” he told The Defender. “I believe it is important to ensure that Canadians have an opportunity to be heard, especially when they feel their concerns have not received sufficient attention,” he said.
Allison’s move brings back into view Health Canada’s move to seal Covid vaccine injury records for 15 years, a decision that critics argued protected bureaucrats from scrutiny, leaving Canadians to fight compensation battles unsupported.
Allison, who previously opposed mandates and supported natural immunity from Covid, said the 2023 National Citizens Inquiry performed “valuable work,” but lacked participation from officials. “Having those voices at the table could have allowed for a more comprehensive examination,” he said.
The timing of the inquiries launch is pointed, after Ottawa was forced to claw back its vaccine injury program from a private contractor, after it was found over half of the $50 million in funding went on administration costs. Read more at The Defender, CPAC, The Vaccine Reaction, Global News on YouTube and Dean Allison on X.
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