OTTAWA—NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says Justin Trudeau can no longer be trusted and is calling on the prime minister to apologize after a damning report concluded that Trudeau broke the Conflict of Interest Act during the SNC-Lavalin affair.

Singh said the report from Parliament’s ethics commissioner shows Trudeau should not continue to be prime minister after the Oct. 21 federal election, and that it casts doubt on all of the Liberals actions in government.

“We know right now—we’ve got proof, we have evidence—that (Trudeau) caved to the demands of SNC-Lavalin, to a powerful corporation, to change the law to effectively get them off the hook,” Singh told a news conference Wednesday in Victoria, B.C.

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“What other interest groups are they working for? What other industries have they made promises to? Are they going to actually going to bring in pharmacare or are they beholden to the pharmaceutical industry?

“How do we believe them when we see that they’re working to use their influence and power, not to help people, but to help those who are at the very, very top? And that’s just wrong,” he said.

Singh’s New Democrats have long called for a public inquiry into allegations that Trudeau and members of the Prime Minister’s Office inappropriately pressured former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to overrule public prosecutors and halt the criminal case against SNC-Lavalin.

The Montreal-based global engineering firm was charged in 2015 with bribery and fraud linked to work in Libya from 2001 to 2011, when the dictator Moammar Gadhafi was in power.

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In his report published Wednesday, ethics commissioner Mario Dion concluded Trudeau broke Canada’s conflict of interest law by overseeing an effort to improperly influence Wilson-Raybould so she would offer the company a remediation deal instead of proceeding with a trial. Dion concluded this would have advanced in SNC-Lavalin’s private interests, because a criminal conviction would result in lost contracts and other potential economic impacts.

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Dion’s report details how SNC-Lavalin lobbied the Trudeau Liberals to secure a remediation deal — first by pushing for the law to be changed so prosecutors could offer one, and then by campaigning for a deal to avoid a criminal trail it warned could result in Canadian job losses and the relocation of the company headquarters from Montreal.

Earlier this year, after alleging Trudeau and his office tried to politically interfere with her decision in the SNC-Lavalin case, Wilson-Raybould resigned from cabinet. Trudeau then booted her from the Liberal caucus after she released a recording of a phone call with the former head of the civil service, who pushed her to consider an outside opinion on a remediation deal for SNC-Lavalin three months after she told Trudeau she would not do so.

On Wednesday, Singh said it’s now clear that Wilson-Raybould was right all along and that Trudeau should apologize for what Dion concluded: that Trudeau’s office pushed Wilson-Raybould to intervene for partisan reasons and that the prime minister subsequently used his authority to discredit her.

“He applied inappropriate pressure to benefit a powerful corporation and to help his own reelection,” Singh said.

“They’re not working for the benefit of everyday families, they’re working to make it easier for the multimillionaires, and that’s really what I think is at the heart of this matter.”

The NDP promises to launch a public inquiry into the SNC-Lavalin affair if they win power in this fall’s federal election. The party also proposes to change the law so that any corporation is barred from lobbying the government while it faces criminal charges.