Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Duffy loses appeal over Senate lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Aug, 2020 06:06 PM
  • Duffy loses appeal over Senate lawsuit

An attempt by Sen. Mike Duffy to overturn a decision blocking him from suing the Senate for millions of dollars over his suspension without pay has been rejected.

The Ontario Court of Appeal is upholding a 2018 lower court ruling that said the Senate's decision to suspend Duffy is protected by parliamentary privilege.

In a unanimous ruling today, the judges say the courts do not have jurisdiction to rule on matters decided by the Senate, which can only be adjudicated by the Senate itself.

The appeal was part of the Prince Edward Island senator's efforts to receive $7.8 million in reimbursement and damages from the Senate, RCMP and the federal government.

Duffy was suspended without pay for nearly two years over the Senate expenses scandal, for which he was ultimately acquitted of 31 criminal charges in 2016.

His lawyer Lawrence Greenspon had argued the decision to suspend Duffy in November 2013 came at the direction of then-prime minister Stephen Harper's office, making it a politically motivated decision that forfeited the Senate's immunity.

MORE National ARTICLES

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi
A Coquitlam man is missing in an area that connects with a spider web of walking and hiking trails, and Coquitlam RCMP is asking for your help to find him.

Police need your help finding missing Coquitlam hiker Ali Naderi

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative
People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier launched a full-throated attack on Erin O'Toole Monday, accusing the newly minted Conservative leader of wearing a "true blue" mask during the leadership campaign and warning that he is really "Liberal-lite."

Bernier says O'Toole not a real conservative

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute
Canadian lumber producers cheered the latest decision Monday from the World Trade Organization on Canada's long-standing dispute with its largest trading partner over exports of softwood lumber — a finding the United States quickly denounced as unfair, biased and flawed.

WTO backs Canada in U.S. softwood dispute

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness
Canadian First Nations and environmentalists have joined a U.S. lawsuit aimed at overturning a decision that opens an Alaska wilderness to oil and gas exploration.

Canadians join fight over Alaska wilderness

Military lifts order grounding Snowbirds team

Military lifts order grounding Snowbirds team
The Snowbirds are allowed back in the air after a deadly crash this spring saw the aerobatic team's iconic jets grounded in British Columbia for more than three months.

Military lifts order grounding Snowbirds team

Central bank seeks input on inflation target

Central bank seeks input on inflation target
The Bank of Canada is turning to the public for input on its inflation-rate target that underlies any changes to the central bank's trend-setting interest rate.

Central bank seeks input on inflation target