Saskatoon StarPhoenix

SEN. DON MEREDITH COULD FIND OUT AS EARLY AS NEXT WEEK WHAT PUNISHMENT HE’LL FACE FOR HAVING A SEXUAL RELATIONSH­IP WITH A TEEN. ‘WE’RE COMING TO THE FINAL END OF THE PROCESS,’ SAYS THE ETHICS PANEL CHAIR.

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OTTAWA • Sen. Don Meredith could find out as early as next week what punishment he’ll face for having a sexual relationsh­ip with a 16-yearold girl.

The Senate’s ethics committee — which has been pondering a range of sanctions from reprimand to outright expulsion — is hoping to finalize its recommenda­tions and table them in the upper chamber next week.

“We’re coming to the final end of the process,” committee chair Raynell Andreychuk said following a three-hour, closed-door meeting Thursday.

The committee is to meet again Tuesday to go over its draft report and hopefully wrap up its work, Andreychuk said.

The contents of the report will not be made public until it is tabled in the Senate, which must sign off on any sanctions recommende­d by the committee. Andreychuk said while the objective is to table the final report next week, she acknowledg­ed that may yet prove too ambitious.

“We want to be fair, we want to weigh all of the interests: the institutio­n, the senators, the public and Sen. Meredith. And so, while we have to be prompt, we also have to be correct in following the process and being fair to everyone.”

The committee’s deliberati­ons were sparked by a damning report last month from the Senate’s ethics officer, Lyse Ricard, who concluded that Meredith didn’t uphold the “highest standards of dignity inherent to the position of senator” and acted in a way that could damage the Senate itself.

According to Ricard, Meredith began a relationsh­ip with the girl when she was just 16; 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 turned 18.

He has since apologized publicly for what he called a moral failing but has rejected near-universal calls from fellow senators for his resignatio­n.

In terms of sanctions, Andreychuk said the committee has “looked and canvassed everything that we think would be appropriat­e in Senate setting.”

The Senate 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.

However, some senators and experts have pointed out that the Constituti­on does give the Senate and House of Commons the same powers as the British House of Commons, which can permanentl­y expel a member.

The Senate could also suspend Meredith without pay, as was done with senators Mike Duffy, Pamela Wallin and Patrick Brazeau when they were under police investigat­ion for alleged irregulari­ties in their expense claims.

Meredith was investigat­ed by police but never charged.

However, a suspension lasts only until the end of a parliament­ary session and must be renewed at the start of every new session.

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