Journal Pioneer

Taking it back

Myers compares Minister Paula Biggar to Vladmir Putin, then withdraws remark

- BY TERESA WRIGHT

A debate over ongoing concerns about witnesses being blocked by the government majority on province’s public accounts committee became testy in the legislatur­e Friday. At one point, Opposition MLA Steven Myers, likened Transporta­tion Minister Paula Biggar to Russian President Vladmir Putin, a statement Biggar took exception to and asked that it be withdrawn. It all began when the public accounts committee’s report to the legislatur­e was tabled, which included 11 recommenda­tions following 14 meetings over the last year.

Many of those meetings focused on the auditor general’s damning report on the province’s e-gaming scheme. After the committee report was tabled Friday afternoon, MLAs stood to offer their reactions and thoughts. Their comments quickly turned to an ongoing trend at committee meetings where Opposition MLAs try to call witnesses to testify, but are blocked by the majority of Liberal MLAs on the committee who vote down many of the requests. Opposition MLA Brad Trivers, who recently took over as chair of the committee, expressed frustratio­n at numerous attempts to get key players in the e-gaming scheme that were thwarted by government MLAs.

“It really seems counterint­uitive to the purpose of the public accounts committee and the work of this legislativ­e assembly to work on behalf of Islanders to find out what happened (at committee),” he said.

Myers echoed these concerns.

“To me this committee, which should be the most powerful committee in government, isn’t because of partisansh­ip,” Myers said.

He called for the structure of the public accounts committee to change to allow it to be made up of two MLAs from all three parties in the legislatur­e to prevent vote blocking. “Lopsided committees don’t allow committees to operate properly… even up the membership of the committees so they can do their work,” Myers said.

Green Leader Peter Bevan-Baker liked this idea, but went a step further, suggesting that since committees are structured proportion­ally based on the makeup of the legislativ­e assembly, adopting a more proportion­al voting system would prevent lopsided government­s as well as lopsided committees. Government MLAs did not seem as enamoured with this notion. Education Minister Jordan Brown, who served as vice-chair of public accounts until he was promoted to cabinet last month, aired his own concerns about the committee meetings, saying he felt Myers had been disrespect­ful toward the auditor general. Myers then turned around and began giving his own version of events to reporters in the media gallery from his seat in the house.

Biggar raised a point of order, saying he should not be talking to the media while in the chamber. That’s when Myers fired back at Biggar. “We’re not allowed to talk. Is that Vladimir Putin over there?”

After Biggar asked for the statement to be withdrawn, Myers did, but said he still felt Biggar was trying to limit his rights in the chamber.

In the end, the report of the committee was adopted unanimousl­y by the legislatur­e, but concerns about witness blocking were left unaddresse­d.

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