National Post

B.C. Speaker tried to name friend sergeant-at-arms

Party house leaders refused request this week

- Dirk Meissner rob shaw and

VICTORIA • The Speaker of the British Columbia legislatur­e attempted to have his special adviser replace the sergeant-at-arms on an acting basis before legislator­s voted this week to suspend the man holding the job along with the clerk of the house.

House leaders for the New Democrats, Liberals and Greens said Thursday they met with Speaker Darryl Plecas on Monday about placing sergeant-at-arms Gary Lenz and Clerk Craig James on administra­tive leave pending an investigat­ion.

Plecas proposed naming his special adviser, Alan Mullen, as acting sergeantat-arms but the party house leaders refused.

“The suggestion was made. It was rejected,” said NDP house leader Mike Farnworth. “Everybody accepted it and we moved on.”

The next day the house voted unanimousl­y to place Lenz and James on leave with pay.

Liberal house leader Mary Polak released a sworn affidavit Thursday that said Plecas told the three house leaders on Monday evening that he wanted to make the Mullen appointmen­t.

“Our response was ‘No,’ ” Polak at a news conference. “It’s not appropriat­e.”

Green house leader Sonia Furstenau said Polak’s affidavit is accurate.

After the vote, Mullen said the RCMP had launched a criminal investigat­ion, but neither the RCMP nor the B.C. Prosecutio­n Service will confirm the nature of the probe or say who they are investigat­ing.

Mullen said Plecas hired him in January to work on issues of concern, which included the legislatur­e investigat­ion. He said he and Plecas are friends after working together at federal prisons in B.C.’s Fraser Valley.

Mullen and Plecas presented their investigat­ive results to RCMP in late August. The Mounties then obtained two special prosecutor­s to oversee their investigat­ion on Oct. 1, which is a step used to prevent against the perception of political interferen­ce.

Mullen and Plecas told the party house leaders Tuesday about the special prosecutor, and the house leaders then instructed MLAs to vote unanimousl­y to suspend the two men.

The Liberal house leader said she did not know that Mullen had been conducting a secret seven-month investigat­ion of James and Lenz.

Premier John Horgan told reporters Thursday he was learning about the investigat­ion and hiring efforts at the same time as the public.

“This was a surprise to me,” he said, mentioning his sister phoned him that morning to ask what was happening at the legislatur­e. “I know the individual­s in question. I’ve been working with them for many years. This is a shock to the institutio­n and a shock to the British Columbians.”

When asked if he condones the Speaker hiring a friend, appointing that person to conduct a secret investigat­ion of top legislatur­e officials without informing MLAs and then suggesting that person replace one of the people ousted, Horgan sidesteppe­d. “This is news to me today,” he said. “I’m processing that.”

Plecas was elected as a Liberal but after the May 2017 election he sat as an Independen­t and became Speaker as the NDP worked to form a minority government with the backing of the Green party. He was subsequent­ly removed from the Liberal party.

 ?? CHAD HIPOLITO / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? House Speaker Darryl Plecas leaves his office as journalist­s try to ask him questions outside his office at Legislatur­e in Victoria on Thursday. Plecas proposed naming his special adviser, Alan Mullen, as acting sergeant-at-arms.
CHAD HIPOLITO / THE CANADIAN PRESS House Speaker Darryl Plecas leaves his office as journalist­s try to ask him questions outside his office at Legislatur­e in Victoria on Thursday. Plecas proposed naming his special adviser, Alan Mullen, as acting sergeant-at-arms.

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