Cape Breton Post

Embattled senator will appear before ethics committee

- BY COLIN PERKEL

Sen. Don Meredith plans to appear before the Senate ethics committee next week although it’s not yet clear how he will do that, his lawyer said Tuesday.

In an interview, Bill Trudell said Meredith, under fire for his sexual relationsh­ip with a teenager, could appear via video or teleconfer­ence on April 4.

“The Senate (committee) announced this morning that they’ve invited him to appear,” Trudell said. “He will be honouring the invitation, but in what form is to be determined given concerns, shared by me, about his health.”

The married senator is currently on sick leave following a damning report by the Senate ethics officer on his affair with a teenager. Among other things, the report found he had abused his position.

The five-member ethics panel formally invited Meredith to attend the meeting next week to “provide him with an opportunit­y to be heard by the committee,” according to a public notice that gave no further details of the hearing.

In addition, the committee was set to meet in camera on Wednesday to consider the report by ethics officer Lyse Ricard, who said Meredith had sex with the young woman known only as Ms. M. Although he had taken some rehabilita­tive steps — among them praying and marital counsellin­g — and had proposed further measures, they weren’t sufficient, she found.

“I have concluded that while they may have some salutary effects and may help prevent further breaches of this nature by Sen. Meredith, the remedial measures he has proposed do not remedy the harm that his actions have caused to the office of Senator and the institutio­n of the Senate,” Ricard said.

In Ottawa Tuesday, Sen. Anne Cools called Ricard’s report “an opinion,” not a conclusion, and said at this point she would not be “joining a lynch mob” by voting to expel her beleaguere­d colleague as many want to see happen.

“I don’t think we go after people’s personal morality,” Cools said. “At the end of the day, it remains a personal moral question.”

Meredith has spoken publicly only once and has otherwise dropped out of sight since Ricard’s report almost three weeks ago.

In an interview with The Canadian Press, he repeatedly apologized and begged forgivenes­s for what he called his “moral failing” in pursuing the affair with the teenager.

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