National Post

Audited for Camembert and crackers, senator says

EXPENSE SCANDAL

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OTTAWA • A Conservati­ve senator is miffed that she is being asked to justify claiming a meal expense while travelling when she could have eaten a free airline breakfast of “icecold Camembert with broken crackers.”

That’s the level of detail Nancy Ruth says she has been subjected to by Auditor General Michael Ferguson, who is conducting a comprehens­ive audit of senators’ expenses.

Auditors have asked some senators to clarify their expenses, requesting that they account for everything from single phone calls to sandwiches eaten during committee meetings to postage stamps.

And they’ve been cross-referencin­g daily expense claims with cellphone records and senators’ emails.

Ms. Ruth said Wednesday that she’s been asked why she didn’t eat free airline food rather than file breakfast expense claims on a couple of occasions.

“Well, those [airline] breakfasts are pretty awful,” she said. “If you want ice-cold Camembert with broken crackers, have it.”

The Senate invited Mr. Ferguson in 2013 to conduct the audit following embarrassi­ng revelation­s about allegedly improper expense claims by suspended Conservati­ve senators Mike Duffy, Patrick Brazeau and Pamela Wallin and Liberal senator Mac Harb, who has since resigned.

Messrs. Duffy, Brazeau and Harb have all been charged with fraud and breach of trust; the RCMP investigat­ion into Ms. Wallin’s expense claims is continuing.

Mr. Ferguson is expected to release the results of the audit in June.

Some senators have been grumbling privately f or months about the intrusiven­ess of the audit and expressing fears that Mr. Ferguson doesn’t understand the nature of their work.

Ms. Ruth gave voice to some of those concerns Wednesday. “Most of their questions are not very sophistica­ted, nor do they really have anything to do with Senate business. ... If I eat cold Camembert and soda crackers, is that Senate business? Don’t ask. I mean, they’re really weird.”

The 73-year-old senator also said she’s “a little bit” concerned that the auditor is imposing a narrow definition of Senate business, whereas she believes Senate business is broad. “I’m a feminist activist, so my angle on Canadian life is to look at gender-based analysis on policy and things like that. I don’t think the auditor general particular­ly considers that Senate business,” she said.

“I just don’t think they understand anything of what it’s like to fly around the world to get here to Ottawa,” added Ms. Ruth, who lives in Toronto.

Most senators refused to talk about the audit Wednesday, citing confidenti­ality agreements they were asked to sign at the start of the audit process.

Conservati­ve Sen. Don Meredith urged everyone to wait for Mr. Ferguson’s final report before pronouncin­g on the process.

However, NDP Leader Tom Mulcair said the auditor general’s requests for clarificat­ion suggest he’s found some senators are “using public money as their personal piggy bank.” He accused senators of trying to stall the report.

“Canadians have a right to know what’s in that report and they should stop stalling it,” he said, renewing his call for abolition of the “archaic, expensive and useless institutio­n.”

 ?? Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Some senators think the auditor general is imposing a narrow definition of their business.
Adrian Wyld / THE CANADIAN PRESS Some senators think the auditor general is imposing a narrow definition of their business.
 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS files ?? Senator Nancy Ruth
THE CANADIAN PRESS files Senator Nancy Ruth

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