Journal Pioneer

Tory senators lead opposition to random roadside alcohol testing

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OTTAWA — Conservati­ve senators are leading a charge to gut legislatio­n aimed at cracking down on impaired driving — voting to delete a measure Conservati­ves have previously championed. The Senate’s legal and constituti­onal affairs committee voted late Wednesday to delete a provision from Bill C-46 that would authorize police to conduct random roadside breathalyz­er tests, without needing reasonable grounds to suspect the driver may be impaired by alcohol.

The move was proposed by Conservati­ve Sen. Denise Batters on the grounds that the provision is likely to violate the charter of rights and would, therefore, be struck down by the courts as unconstitu­tional.

She won the backing of four other Conservati­ves senators on the committee, as well as the committee chair, Liberal independen­t Sen. Serge Joyal, a constituti­onal expert in his own right.

Five independen­t senators voted against deleting the provision, including Sen. Marc Gold, who is also a constituti­onal law expert. One Liberal independen­t abstained.

Among the Conservati­ves who supported deletion was Sen. Jean-Guy Dagenais, a former police officer. Just two years ago, Dagenais joined former Conservati­ve public safety minister Steven Blaney at a news conference, where the MP introduced a private member’s bill that contained a similar provision on random alcohol breath tests.

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