Toronto Star

Tories boot Clement over sexting scandal

Veteran MP’s departure comes as women complain of inappropri­ate contact on Twitter

- ALEX BOUTILIER

OTTAWA — Tony Clement, the two-time Conservati­ve leadership hopeful with a storied career in right-wing politics in Ontario, has been pushed out of his party amid a growing list of allegation­s of sexual impropriet­y.

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer told reporters Wednesday that Clement has resigned from caucus — at Scheer’s request — a day after Clement alleged he was being extorted after sending sexual photos to an unknown party.

While Clement suggested Tuesday that it was an isolated incident, several women spoke out against him on Twitter, suggesting he had instigated inap- propriate contact through social media.

“I took him at his word that this was an isolated incident. Since then, there have been numerous reports of other incidents, allegation­s,” Scheer told reporters outside the House of Commons.

“New informatio­n became available today that suggests that there are allegation­s that this is not an isolated incident, and therefore I asked Tony to resign from caucus, and he has done so.”

In a statement Tuesday evening, Clement said he had sent several sexually explicit photos and one video to a person he believed to be a consenting adult.

At Clement’s request, the RCMP is now trying to figure out who that person actually is.

Reached Wednesday night, Clement said he would not comment further at this time.

Claire McWatt is a staffer for Toronto Councillor Jon Filion. She said she’s heard from dozens of people after she

posted on Twitter that Clement sent her late-night messages.

The multitude of messages she received suggest the advances are “extremely common with this individual, with Mr. Clement. What should be most nerve-wracking is how common it is,” McWatt told the Star Wednesday.

The Star reported Tuesday night that Clement notified the Privy Council Office, the department that supports the prime minister, about the incident. The Prime Minister’s Office has also been apprised of the matter. That would be rare for an opposition MP caught up in a sexting scandal. But Clement sat on the newly-formed National Security and Informatio­n Committee of Parliament­arians, a top-secret clearance committee of MPs and senators that now oversees Canada’s national security apparatus.

Global News reported Tuesday that an attempt was made to blackmail Clement for 50,000 euros. The Star has not independen­tly verified that informatio­n.

But multiple women on Twitter accused Clement of latenight messages on social media.

“This is part of a much larger problem,” McWatt said. “Every single day, there are men, men in political positions, who engage on social media and don’t do so in a creepy way … We need to start having conversati­ons about the broader problem that is there are some men who are being creepy and those there are not. And that there is a difference between creepy and not creepy.”

In a statement to MyMusokaNo­w.com, Clement’s wife, the lawyer and author Lynne Golding, said her husband is “taking the action he needs to get help.”

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