Vancouver Sun

DISGRACED SENATOR MEREDITH RESIGNS

Upper Chamber was set to vote on expulsion

- JOAN BRYDEN AND KRISTY KIRKUP

OTTAWA • Sen. Don Meredith, his name now inexorably linked with his sexual relationsh­ip with a teenage girl, declared Tuesday he would resign his Senate seat, short-circuiting what could have been a historic vote to kick him out of the upper chamber.

The Senate had been poised to vote as early as Wednesday on an explosive Senate ethics committee report that found Meredith unfit to serve as a senator and recommende­d that the upper house take the unpreceden­ted step of expelling him.

Meredith pre-empted that vote Tuesday with a terse, 174-word statement.

“I am acutely aware that the upper chamber is more important than my moral failings,” the statement said.

"After consulting with my family, community leaders and my counsel over the past several weeks, I have decided to move forward with my life with the full support of my wife and my children.

“I am blessed to have had their unconditio­nal love and support throughout this ordeal.

“It is my hope that my absence from the Senate will allow the senators to focus their good work on behalf of all Canadians.”

The statement did not explicitly refer to resignatio­n, nor did the Senate have immediate confirmati­on of his departure.

However, Meredith’s lawyer, Bill Trudell, confirmed that Meredith had decided to resign.

Had Meredith not agreed to go voluntaril­y, it’s virtually certain his former colleagues would have voted overwhelmi­ngly to give him the boot.

“All I would say, I guess, is good riddance,” said Conservati­ve Sen. Denise Batters on hearing about Meredith’s resignatio­n.

The Senate has never expelled one of its members and Meredith’s resignatio­n leaves untested the chamber’s legal authority to do so.

The Senate has no explicit power to expel a member. But the ethics committee accepted the legal opinion of the law clerk and parliament­ary counsel to the Senate that the Constituti­on gives the upper house the same privileges enjoyed by the United Kingdom’s House of Commons, which can permanentl­y eject a member.

In his statement, Meredith said expulsion would have “major implicatio­ns” for the Senate.

“This is a constituti­onal fight in which I will not engage.”

The ethics committee’s recommenda­tion followed a report from Senate ethics officer Lyse Ricard earlier this year.

Ricard concluded that Meredith, a 52-year-old married Pentecosta­l minister from Toronto, had failed to uphold the “highest standards of dignity inherent to the position of senator” and acted in a way that could damage the Senate itself.

She said Meredith began a relationsh­ip with a girl when she was just 16, which progressed from flirtatiou­s online chats to fondling, sexually explicit live videos and, eventually, to sexual intercours­e — once shortly before she turned 18 and twice after.

Ricard also concluded that Meredith had abused his position as a senator to take advantage of the teen, known only as Ms. M.

Meredith acknowledg­ed the affair insisted he did not have intercours­e with the girl until after she turned 18.

Until Tuesday, he had rejected near-universal calls for his resignatio­n from fellow senators.

Several senators said the decisive manner in which the Senate dealt with Meredith demonstrat­es that the chamber, plagued by scandal in recent years, has turned a corner.

“The institutio­n is a mirror image of our society, with all the good and all the bad that comes with it,” said Conservati­ve Sen. Leo Housakos, a former Senate speaker who originally referred the Ms. M. case to the ethics officer.

“The key thing is that whenever we have some bad, that we don’t sweep it under the carpet, that we face it head on ... We are not proud of a number of things, but we’ve dealt with them, we’ve dealt with them head on and we will continue to have zero tolerance for this type of behaviour.”

The decision to punish Meredith signals “a new future for the Senate,” agreed Conservati­ve Sen. Josee Verner.

Meredith was named to the Senate by former prime minister Stephen Harper in 2010.

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Don Meredith

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