In 2015 Chinese billionaire and
Chinese Communist Party advisor
Zhang Bin attended a
Liberal Party of Canada fundraising event before pledging a $200,000 donation to the foundation. In March 2023, former chief executive
Morris Rosenberg defended media criticism of the donation by saying that Canada and China had had a better relationship at time. Allegations regarding the role of the
Chinese Communist Party in directing and funding the donation were revealed as part of a series of leaks claiming to be from the CSIS regarding
Chinese political interference in Canada. On March 1, 2023, the foundation announced that it would return the $140,000 that it has thus far received from Zhang. The remainder of Zhang's $200,000 donation was never received. Three directors remained in post on a temporary basis in order to meet legal minimums. On April 12, day
La Presse reported that other governance concerns had led to the resignations, including record keeping issues that prevented returning the $140,000 donation. On April 12, the foundation's board chair
Edward Johnson said that it would commission an independent review of Zhang's donation. The foundation also requested that the
Auditor General of Canada conduct a review, however, the office declined because its mandate is limited to reviews of federal government departments, agencies,
Crown corporations, and those of territorial governments. On April 28, 2023, former chair Pascale Fournier testified at a parliamentary ethics committee. Fournier said that she did not know who was behind the $140,000 donation to the foundation and that while the money was formally received from
Millennium Golden Eagle International (Canada), the company provided an address in Beijing rather than the address in Hong Kong that matched the website address of the company's parent company. The
Canadian Security Intelligence Service intercepted the telecommunications of
Millennium Golden Eagle International leader
Zhang Bin and heard promises that the donation would be reimbursed by the Government of China. In testimony before the House of Commons ethics committee on May 3, 2023, Sacha Trudeau called Zhang Bin "honorable", insisting that the foundation was never the target of foreign interference and that he "had seen no trace of it". == See also ==