Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Senate Colleagues Urge Don Meredith To Quit Over Sexual Relationship With 16-Yr-Old Girl

Darpan News Desk, 10 Mar, 2017 11:48 PM
  • Senate Colleagues Urge Don Meredith To Quit Over Sexual Relationship With 16-Yr-Old Girl
OTTAWA — Colleagues of all political stripes pilloried Don Meredith and urged the controversial Conservative senator to give up his Senate seat Friday following an explosive ethics investigation of his sexual relationship with a 16-year-old girl.
 
Sen. Peter Harder, the Liberal government's point man in the Senate, denounced Meredith's conduct as disturbing, unacceptable and an affront to Canadian standards of decency as he urged him to step down for the sake of his family.
 
Even those who once defended Meredith described being fed up, saying the only honourable thing for him to do was never set foot in the Senate again.
 
Harder said Meredith's resignation would ensure he didn't drag himself, his family, the woman he was romantically involved with and the Senate as a whole through the mud — a fate Harder suggested Meredith should want to avoid.
 
Meredith, a married father of two and an ordained minister, has remained silent and has yet to respond to a request for comment.
 
It's unclear if the Senate has the authority to expel Meredith over the conduct detailed in Senate ethics officer Lyse Ricard's report.
 
The upper chamber has never turfed one of its own for any reason.
 
Most famously, it did in 2013 suspend three senators without pay for a parliamentary session — Mike Duffy, Pamela Wallin and Patrick Brazeau. And in 1998, Andy Thompson retired after being suspended without pay for having barely set foot on Parliament Hill for years.
 
Several senators said they would like to see the Senate impose the harshest punishments possible against Meredith.
 
"I'd be very disappointed if he walked through the doors of the Senate again," said Conservative Sen. David Wells of Newfoundland and Labrador.
 
In a long-awaited report released Thursday, Ricard said Meredith failed to uphold the “highest standards of dignity inherent to the position of senator” and acted in a way that could damage the Senate itself.
 
The report found Meredith, 52, used his Senate cellphone for explicit chats, tried to help the woman land an internship on Parliament Hill, promised her a committee appointment and suggested he could help with her mother’s permanent residency file.
 
Ricard also detailed sexually explicit online video chats between the two.
 
The report said Ricard believes Meredith had sex with the woman at least once before she turned 18, and twice after she turned 18. Meredith acknowledged he had sexual relations at least once with the woman after she turned 18, the report said.
 
In a letter attached to the report, Meredith told Ricard he deeply regretted what happened and vowed he would never breach the ethics code again.
 
Meredith was removed Friday from his leadership post within the independent senators' caucus. The head of the group, Sen. Elaine McCoy, said she spoke Friday with Meredith and recommended he resign.
 
"I think that would be the honourable thing to do," she said. "I'm sorry to say that."
 
The report is just the latest blemish on the Senate's reputation, which has taken a beating in recent years as a result of the Senate expenses scandal. Conservative Sen. Vern White, who also echoed calls for Meredith to quit, said the latest issue should not reflect on the upper chamber as a whole.
 
"Let's be very clear: Don Meredith owns his own actions," said White, a former police chief in Ottawa. "I'm not his keeper, and I don't think anyone else is. He owns it, and he'll have to deal with it. It has nothing to do with the Senate."
 
Appointed by former prime minister Stephen Harper, Meredith quit the Conservative caucus in June 2015 after the Toronto Star first reported on the relationship.
 
Speaking in Houston, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said it's up to the Senate, not him, to decide what to do about Meredith. He did say, however, that politicians have to show themselves worthy of the public trust.

MORE National ARTICLES

Getting A Coffee Led To Arrest Of Woman Accused Of Making Hoax 911 Call: Police

  A 36-year-old woman is charged with public mischief.

Getting A Coffee Led To Arrest Of Woman Accused Of Making Hoax 911 Call: Police

Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside

Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside
PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — The RCMP are thanking a Canada Post employee in British Columbia for helping solve a case involving a nude toddler who had gone missing.

Wearing Boots But In The Buff, Prince George Toddler Ok After Wandering Outside

Whistler Blackcomb Inks Long-term Agreement Renewals With B.C., First Nations

Whistler Blackcomb Inks Long-term Agreement Renewals With B.C., First Nations
WHISTLER, B.C. — The Colorado-based company that owns the Whistler Blackcomb ski resort in British Columbia has announced a 60-year renewal of the resort's master development agreements with the B.C. government.

Whistler Blackcomb Inks Long-term Agreement Renewals With B.C., First Nations

Christian Festival Dismisses Mayor's Request To Replace Controversial Headliner

Christian Festival Dismisses Mayor's Request To Replace Controversial Headliner
VANCOUVER — A polarizing American preacher with controversial views on Muslims and the LGBTQ community will headline a Christian festival in Vancouver despite protests from the city's mayor.

Christian Festival Dismisses Mayor's Request To Replace Controversial Headliner

Wall With Canada? White House Spokesman, Media Share A Laugh Over Question, Watch!

Wall With Canada? White House Spokesman, Media Share A Laugh Over Question, Watch!
WASHINGTON — White House spokesman Sean Spicer laughed off the idea of building a wall along the northern U.S. border Thursday after a journalist from Montana floated the notion during his daily media briefing.

Wall With Canada? White House Spokesman, Media Share A Laugh Over Question, Watch!

Quebec Police Investigate After Child Hands Out Pills On School Bus

JOLIETTE, Que. — Quebec provincial police are investigating reports an elementary school student handed out pills on a school bus earlier in the week.

Quebec Police Investigate After Child Hands Out Pills On School Bus