Edmonton Journal

Court nixes Guergis lawsuit against Harper

- COLIN PERKEL

TORONTO — A former Conservati­ve cabinet minister who claimed Prime Minister Stephen Harper unfairly fired her as part of a conspiracy that ousted her from caucus has no grounds to sue, Ontario’s top court ruled Friday.

Helena Guergis had been seeking general damages of $800,000, along with another $250,000 in punitive damages from each of Harper, his former chief of staff, former principal secretary, the Conservati­ve party, and others.

In its ruling Friday, the Ontario Court of Appeal agreed the suit was an abuse of process, but also said it would have no chance of success anyway.

Guergis sued after the Canadian Human Rights Commission refused to hear her complaint against Harper and the party on the basis it had no jurisdicti­on to interfere with her removal from cabinet or caucus.

Among other things, she alleged defamation, conspiracy, negligence, and intentiona­l infliction of mental suffering.

In response, Harper and the others argued they were protected by Crown or parliament­ary privilege, or that their statements were not defamatory. In any event, they argued, the suit was an abuse of process because the commission had already dealt with the issue.

In a ruling last August, Ontario Superior Court Justice Charles Hackland sided with Harper and the others. He also decided Guergis’s claim could not possibly succeed.

The Appeal Court agreed with Hackland.

Guergis did have one small win. The court said statements made on television by one of the defendants, Conservati­ve MP Shelly Glover, could possibly be defamatory.

The court ordered Guergis to pay $33,000 in costs.

According to court documents, Guergis’s problems began in December 2009 when cabinet minister Lisa Raitt said she saw her use cocaine in the bathroom of an Ottawa restaurant, informatio­n that reached Harper’s former chief of staff, Guy Giorno. The problems snowballed in April 2010 amid allegation­s Guergis was caught up in criminal activity with her husband Rahim Jaffer, himself a former Edmonton Tory MP.

Harper, Giorno and his former principal secretary, Raymond Novak, passed the allegation­s to the RCMP and conflict commission­er. The RCMP investigat­ed but never charged Guergis with any crime.

Guergis, who was minister for the status of women, alleged Harper forced her to resign from cabinet on April 9, 2010. She was booted from caucus and not allowed to run as a Conservati­ve in her Simcoe-Grey riding. She ran as an independen­t in 2011 and lost.

 ?? DARREN CALABRESE/ THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES ?? Helena Guergis, a former Conservati­ve MP and cabinet minister, has been told she can’t sue over her ousting from cabinet.
DARREN CALABRESE/ THE CANADIAN PRESS/ FILES Helena Guergis, a former Conservati­ve MP and cabinet minister, has been told she can’t sue over her ousting from cabinet.

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