Penticton Herald

Committee mulls fate of senator

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OTTAWA — The Senate’s ethics committee met behind closed doors Wednesday to consider what sanctions can or should be imposed on disgraced Sen. Don Meredith for engaging in a sexual relationsh­ip with a teenage girl.

Options under considerat­ion ranged from a reprimand to outright expulsion from the upper house, but no conclusion was reached.

Conservati­ve Sen. Raynell Andreychuk said the committee has an obligation to give Meredith a “reasonable opportunit­y” to speak to the committee before it reports back to the Senate with a recommenda­tion for remedial action or sanctions.

Meredith has taken sick leave and was not present at Wednesday’s meeting, but Andreychuk said the committee is “in communicat­ion” with his lawyer. She would not say whether Meredith being on sick leave could delay the proceeding­s.

“We’re going to move as quickly as we can and do our job (as) fairly as we can,” she said. “We don’t always control dates and times.”

In a news release later, the committee said it has already afforded Meredith an opportunit­y to appear and has also offered him alternativ­e ways to testify, such as video conference or a written submission.

Meredith has rejected near-universal calls from fellow senators for his resignatio­n since Senate ethics officer Lyse Ricard issued a damning report earlier this month that concluded he had violated the chamber’s code of ethics.

The married Pentecosta­l pastor, 52, improperly used his Senate position to lure the vulnerable teen, identified only as Ms. M, Ricard concluded.

Meredith’s relationsh­ip with Ms. M began when she was just 16, the report said. It progressed from flirtatiou­s online chats to fondling and sexually explicit live videos and, eventually, to sexual intercours­e — once shortly before the teen turned 18 and twice after.

Meredith has acknowledg­ed the relationsh­ip but maintains he only had intercours­e with the teen after she had turned 18.

The Senate, which must sign off on whatever sanction the ethics committee recommends, has never expelled a senator before, and it’s not clear whether it has the constituti­onal authority to do so when the senator in question has not been convicted of any crime.

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