Ottawa Citizen

Wynne threatens legal action over Brown’s ‘trial’ comments

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne has asked the leader of the Opposition to retract comments he made about her or face legal action.

The premier’s lawyers wrote a letter to Patrick Brown on Wednesday, saying the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader had told reporters that Wynne was standing trial in a Liberal bribery case. The letter said Wynne is not on trial or even under investigat­ion, but is rather offering voluntary testimony and co-operating with the court process, and therefore Brown should retract the comments and apologize.

Wynne’s office made the letter public moments before the premier took the witness stand in a trial in Sudbury for two former Liberal staffers who are facing bribery charges under the Election Act.

“She has gone so far as to waive her parliament­ary privilege and will voluntaril­y appear as a witness at the trial,” the premier’s lawyer, Jack Siegel, wrote.

“There is a world of difference between this high level of co-operation and your defamatory reference to ‘when she stands trial’; she is not on trial, and will continue to take all necessary measures to defend her reputation.”

Brown made the comments on Tuesday when reporters asked him to comment about the Sudbury trial. He said the government was using “legislativ­e tricks” during debate at Queen’s Park to avoid answering questions about the court proceeding­s.

“I hope that the premier will give us answers, maybe when she stands trial,” he said. “That in itself is astonishin­g, that we’ve got a sitting premier, sitting in trial answering questions about these allegation­s of bribery, that in itself is astonishin­g of (how) far this government has fallen.”

Brown was not available for comment. His office did not contest the leader’s remarks, but pointed out that he immediatel­y tried to clarify them when speaking to the media.

PC deputy leader Steve Clark said the Liberal government was trying to distract from the premier’s testimony, which he called “an unpreceden­ted situation.”

“The government issued a press release before the premier testified,” Clark said. “There will probably be other government announceme­nts that will distract from the case. I’m not surprised.”

Clark said the matter would be dealt with by lawyers from both sides.

This is the second time in a week that the Liberal government has threatened legal action over remarks made by a Progressiv­e Conservati­ve member of the provincial legislatur­e about the Sudbury trial. Last week, Bill Walker told a local radio station Wynne was under investigat­ion and facing charges in connection with the bribery trial. Days later, he issued a statement apologizin­g for the remarks.

Deputy premier Deb Matthews denied Tory suggestion­s that the government was trying to distract from the Sudbury trial.

“No, Patrick Brown is a lawyer,” she said. “He knows that what he said was inappropri­ate. He knows he said it in a very, very public forum.

“I don’t know why he didn’t immediatel­y correct the record.”

McMaster University political science professor Henry Jacek said the lawsuit threat is basic political strategy, an attempt to correct the record immediatel­y from the government. It’s also not without precedent in politics but the cases rarely seem to actually go to court, he said.

“They want to get a message out to people that … this is not true,” Jacek said. “In this case, they decided that a lawsuit was the best way to do it. I see it more as political communicat­ion tactic than a legal tactic, even though it is a legal instrument.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada