Close X
Monday, October 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Premier Kenney Cleared After Questions Raised About MP Housing Expenses

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 May, 2019 08:15 PM

    OTTAWA — A House of Commons committee has cleared Alberta Premier Jason Kenney of allegations he wrongly claimed residential expenses while he was a Conservative cabinet minister in Ottawa.


    The Board of Internal Economy has found that Kenney did nothing wrong based on housing rules in place at the time.


    The allegations were raised by Ottawa lawyer Kyle Morrow, who questioned earlier this year why Kenney listed a Calgary home as his primary residence from 2013 to 2015 when flight records suggested he spent little time in his riding.


    Morrow wondered why Kenney was collecting $900 month in secondary residence subsidies for his place in Ottawa while claiming part of his mother's home in a Calgary retirement village as his primary residence.


    Kenney's staff called the allegations a partisan smear, and noted that Morrow had been sharply critical of Kenney in the past on LGBTQ issues.


    Conservative whip Mark Strahl says the committee should be concerned that it was used for partisan purposes in the lead-up to the recent Alberta election campaign.


    "Quite frankly, I think this was a very disturbing case because we can all play this game," Strahl said Friday.


    "We can go back to times when members of the Liberal party were found to have been illegally claiming housing allowances. We can do that if that's what we want this board to become."


    Liberal whip Mark Holland said it is important for the committee to look into issues when they are raised in a public forum.


    "There's a question with secondary expenses — in this instance whether or not staying in your mom's basement constituted a principle residence or not," Holland told the committee.


    "The fact that those questions were out there, it was important to explore them."


    Kenney's United Conservative Party won the Alberta election last month with 63 of 87 seats.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mexico Threw Canada 'Under The Bus,' Liberal MP Tells Mexican Minister

    Canada and Mexico are dealing with lingering hard feelings over last summer's surprise Mexican trade deal with the United States as their new continental trade pact

    Mexico Threw Canada 'Under The Bus,' Liberal MP Tells Mexican Minister

    Talks To Begin In Victoria On New Home, Clearer Context, For Macdonald Statue

    VICTORIA — The City of Victoria and local First Nations are mulling over what to do about the mothballed Sir John A. Macdonald statue.

    Talks To Begin In Victoria On New Home, Clearer Context, For Macdonald Statue

    Prisons Not Meeting Health, End-Of-Life Needs Of Older Inmates, Report Says

    Prisons Not Meeting Health, End-Of-Life Needs Of Older Inmates, Report Says
    OTTAWA — Canada's prison ombudsman says some older, long-serving inmates are being "warehoused" in prisons not equipped to handle end-of-life care.    

    Prisons Not Meeting Health, End-Of-Life Needs Of Older Inmates, Report Says

    Pray, Smile, And Relax At Home: Leadership Guide Sparks Uproar At N.L. Women's Conference

    The conference gathered over 350 women leaders in Newfoundland and Labrador as the government discussed the details and mandate of its updated status-of-women office.

    Pray, Smile, And Relax At Home: Leadership Guide Sparks Uproar At N.L. Women's Conference

    CBC Journalist Files Complaint With Police After His Ear Licked By Well-Known Comedian Boyd Banks

    The man, identified by multiple viewers as comic actor Boyd Banks who has appeared on CBC shows, proceeds to demonstratively lick Glover’s ear and kisses his neck

    CBC Journalist Files Complaint With Police After His Ear Licked By Well-Known Comedian Boyd Banks

    Justin Trudeau: Up To Ethics Watchdog To Determine Truth In SNC-Lavalin Affair

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says it will be up to the country's ethics watchdog to decide who is telling the truth in the SNC-Lavalin affair — himself, or former attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould.

    Justin Trudeau: Up To Ethics Watchdog To Determine Truth In SNC-Lavalin Affair