Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Stephen Harper Says Staffers Such As Ray Novak Enjoy His Confidence

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Aug, 2015 11:52 AM
    OTTAWA — Stephen Harper says the people who work for him enjoy his confidence, otherwise they wouldn't be on his staff.
     
    That was the prime minister's answer when he was asked if he stands by chief of staff, Ray Novak.
     
    Recent testimony in the Mike Duffy fraud trial has more closely linked Novak to the controversial $90,000 payment to Duffy in 2013 by Harper's previous chief of staff, Nigel Wright.
     
    Harper reiterated today during a campaign stop in King Township, Ont. north of Toronto that he holds only Duffy and Wright responsible for any wrongdoing.
     
    "I've been very clear. When people are working for me, they have my confidence. If they didn't have my confidence, they wouldn't be working for me. And in this case I have held the two people accountable who are responsible," Harper said.
     
    "And I'm not going to go around holding everybody else accountable for their actions."
     
    The revelations from the Duffy trial have forced Harper to answer questions about the affair for the last week.
     
    NDP Leader Tom Mulcair was asked what he makes of Harper's comments about Novak.
     
    "I found the prime minister's qualifier revealing," he said in Vancouver.
     
    "(Harper) said people who work for him have his confidence while they work for him, so I don't know what that means long-term for any of the people who are working for him."
     
    Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, campaigning in Victoria, was asked if Harper should trust Novak.
     
    "The issue of trust is at the heart of what we are seeing come from the Duffy trial and, indeed, from the prime minister's behaviour over the past weeks, months and even years," he said.
     
    "Canadians no longer trust their prime minister to tell them the truth. So whatever it is that he says, his loss of integrity in his office is something that Canadians are not soon going to forget and is one of the big reasons why Canadians need real change."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Charges Laid 22-Year-Old Khouri Green After Random Break-In Ends In Fatal Shooting In Surrey

    Charges Laid 22-Year-Old Khouri Green After Random Break-In Ends In Fatal Shooting In Surrey
    Homicide investigators say a 22-year-old man has been charged with the second-degree murder of a Surrey father and well-known realtor.

    Charges Laid 22-Year-Old Khouri Green After Random Break-In Ends In Fatal Shooting In Surrey

    Man Falls To His Death During Unauthorized Visit To Port Coquitlam Construction Site

    Man Falls To His Death During Unauthorized Visit To Port Coquitlam Construction Site
    PORT COQUITLAM, B.C. — A man in his 20s has died after falling four storeys while partying at an apartment construction site in suburban Vancouver.

    Man Falls To His Death During Unauthorized Visit To Port Coquitlam Construction Site

    Changes At Top Of Translink After Metro Vancouver Voters Send Strong Message

    Changes At Top Of Translink After Metro Vancouver Voters Send Strong Message
    VANCOUVER — Metro Vancouver's transit authority says two top managers are out and the acting chief executive will be replaced following a failed transit plebiscite.

    Changes At Top Of Translink After Metro Vancouver Voters Send Strong Message

    B.C. Man Known For 'Great Big Hugs' Died At Work On Day Off: Coroner's Inquest

    B.C. Man Known For 'Great Big Hugs' Died At Work On Day Off: Coroner's Inquest
    Lucy Campbell said on the opening day of a coroner's inquest that 42-year-old Carl Charlie was known for his "incredible smile, great big hugs, handshakes and waves."

    B.C. Man Known For 'Great Big Hugs' Died At Work On Day Off: Coroner's Inquest

    Quebec Man Arrested In Connection With Slaying And Dismemberment Of Samantha Higgins

    Quebec Man Arrested In Connection With Slaying And Dismemberment Of Samantha Higgins
    MONTREAL — Quebec provincial police say a man has been arrested in the slaying and dismemberment of a Montreal woman.

    Quebec Man Arrested In Connection With Slaying And Dismemberment Of Samantha Higgins

    B.C. Teachers' Union Seeks Supreme Court Appeal In Bitter Dispute With Province

    The B.C. Teachers Federation is asking the top court to reconsider a B.C. Court of Appeal decision that ruled in the government's favour in April.

    B.C. Teachers' Union Seeks Supreme Court Appeal In Bitter Dispute With Province