Senator who defended residential schools retires
Lynn Beyak suspended from chamber in 2019
THE GOOD, AS WELL AS THE BAD, OF RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS SHOULD BE RECOGNIZED.
— LYNN BEYAK
OTTAWA • Ontario Sen. Lynn Beyak is leaving the upper chamber three years before her mandatory retirement and defiantly standing by her views on residential schools on her way out.
Named to the Senate on the advice of Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper in 2013, she says she was committed to serving just eight years.
That is the term limit that would have been imposed on senators under the Harper government’s original plan to have an elected Senate, which never came to fruition.
Thirty other senators named on the advice of Harper are still in the Senate and all but one — Alberta Sen. Scott Tannas — have now been there more than eight years.
“Some have criticized me for stating that the good, as well as the bad, of residential schools should be recognized. I stand by that statement,” Beyak wrote in a statement released Monday.
“Others have criticized me for stating that the Truth and Reconciliation Report was not as balanced as it should be. I stand by that statement as well.”
Beyak, 71, got into trouble for publishing derogatory letters about Indigenous people on her website. They were in response to a speech she gave in 2017 about the move to rename the building housing the Prime Minister’s Office on Wellington Street in downtown Ottawa, which at that time was named after Hector-louis Langevin, who was involved in the residential school system.
In that speech, Beyak argued residential schools had done good for Indigenous children, although many suffered physical and sexual abuse and thousands died of disease and malnutrition in them after being forcibly removed from their homes and communities. The schools were operated by churches and funded by the federal government.
The Senate’s ethics officer concluded in March 2019 that five of the letters in particular contained racist content. Beyak, who was kicked out of the Conservative caucus, was suspended without pay from the Senate in May 2019.
She refused for almost a year to delete the letters, casting herself as a champion of free speech and a victim of political correctness.
They were finally deleted by the Senate administration.
She eventually apologized and agreed to take cultural sensitivity training but the ethics committee deemed the initial apology to be perfunctory and the training a fiasco.
Beyak’s suspension ended automatically when Parliament dissolved for the 2019 federal election.
The Senate voted in February 2020 to suspend her again because she hadn’t completed an anti-racism course.
Once she did that, the committee recommended in June that Beyak be reinstated, but Prime Minister Justin Trudeau prorogued Parliament.
That meant her suspension was lifted automatically and she was reinstated.
In December, Sen. Mary Jane Mccallum introduced a motion calling for Beyak’s expulsion. It was not debated before senators paused for the holidays.