National Post (National Edition)

A TOUR OF THE ... HOT ... SIDE OF PARLIAMENT HILL.

STORIES OF SEX, VIOLENCE AND ECCENTRIC STONEWORK FROM ONE OF OTTAWA’S MOST GOSSIPY INSIDERS

- MARIE-DANIELLE SMITH mdsmith@postmedia.com Twitter: mariedanie­lles

Deep in the heart of the Ottawa political jungle there is a savant with a white binder containing salacious tales from parliament­ary history.

The man, who will go unnamed lest he drown in requests for tours, has brought politicos on many an afterhours jaunt around Centre Block to share political yarns and raunchy rumours.

Your intrepid National Post bureau tagged along one September evening.

Here are some of the most interestin­g factoids, fun and serious, with truthiness disclaimer­s: we’ll say it’s “definitely true” if there’s lots of evidence out there, “probably true” if a story is reasonably well-sourced, according to our guy, and “maybe true” if it’s just a persistent rumour.

THE DEPUTY STREAKER

A deputy speaker of the House of Commons from sometime in the 1980s was caught in a compromise­d position with his assistant in a second-floor office. The intruder, a young female staffer delivering some memos, fled — and he ran after her, buck naked, down the hallway. Meanwhile, his paramour had picked up and left, leaving his office door locked shut on her way out. He had to walk some way along the hallowed halls of Parliament before finding a security guard to let him back in, thus earning him the nickname “deputy streaker.” Probably true.

THE TIME NIXON ALMOST DIED IN OTTAWA

Arthur Bremer, a busboy from Milwaukee, brought a gun to Parliament Hill’s centennial flame in April 1972 when U.S. President Richard Nixon was visiting Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau. A police officer happened to stand in his way, blocking a shot of Nixon. Bremer would go on to shoot Alabama Governor George Wallace just a month later, paralyzing him. For this crime, Bremer served 35 years of a 53-year sentence. He was paroled in 2007. The film Taxi Driver was partly inspired by Bremer’s diary. Definitely true.

THE TIME BATS FREAKED OUT THE SPEAKER

Sometime during her tenure in the 1980s, Speaker Jeanne Sauvé had to deal with a wicked MP’s prank. A couple of bats had been flying around in a Centre Block office; the member of parliament pocketed them and let them go once he was in the chamber. A kerfuffle ensued. We are unclear on whether Sauvé’s expletivel­aced response was recorded as more than an “Oh, oh!” in Hansard. Probably true.

THE PARLIAMENT­ARY THREESOMES

During Canada’s 100th anniversar­y fireworks, a then-staffer recounted having run into then-justice minister Pierre Trudeau on Hill grounds. Trudeau was emerging from a bush, buttoning his shirt. A young woman emerged thereafter doing the same. And then, another. Fast forward to the heyday of Brian Mulroney’s government, during which cabinet ministers were drinking beer like water, says our source. A female staffer walked into the cabinet room late at night and witnessed a minister fooling around with twin sisters. Maybe true.

WEIRD STUFF YOU FIND IN PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS

Those who visit Centre Block, or even work there, might be missing out on some oddities about the building itself, which was rebuilt after a fire in 1916. If you look closely, a bunch of fossils are in the walls, made of a special limestone. In the Senate foyer, there are two Viking heads carved into the stonework, plus the faces of four Belgian stonemason­s who’d worked on the building. Toward the House, prime ministers Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin have portraits next to each other but they’re separated by a column so that the two, not friends by any stretch, don’t have to look at each other. Definitely true.

THE (POSSIBLE) LOVE CHILDREN OF PRIME MINISTERS PAST

Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier had either a close friendship or a long-standing affair with his law partner’s wife, Emilié Lavergne. Lavergne’s child, Armand — who later became a member of parliament — is thought to have been Laurier’s. John Diefenbake­r was also believed to have had a child outside marriage. George Dryden, who at one point took a Q-tip from Dief’s cousin to prove he was in the same line, was born to the PM’s secretary. Probably true.

THE TIME A BATHROOM BLEW UP

As his writing shows, in 1966 Albertan Paul Joseph Chartier was deeply angry at politician­s and blamed them for his financial woes. After moving to Toronto that year he entered parliament packing 10 sticks of dynamite. He intended, apparently, to throw them into the House of Commons chamber — in which John Diefenbake­r, Tommy Douglas, Lester Pearson and other Canadian icons were debating at the time. But when Chartier lit the fuse in a bathroom down the hall from the gallery, he blew himself up instead, taking out the bathroom but not hurting anyone else. He’s known as the “mad bomber.” Definitely true.

 ??  ??
 ?? CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? U.S. President Richard Nixon looks up at some odd stone carvings pointed out by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau in the Rotunda on Parliament Hill in this 1972 photo.
CANADIAN PRESS FILES U.S. President Richard Nixon looks up at some odd stone carvings pointed out by Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau in the Rotunda on Parliament Hill in this 1972 photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada