The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Man at centre of Liberal bribery allegation­s believed party jobs were on offer

- BY ALLISON JONES

A man at the centre of bribery allegation­s against two Ontario Liberals says he believed they were offering him opportunit­ies within the party and not government appointmen­ts.

Pat Sorbara, the Ontario Liberal Party CEO at the time of the allegation­s, and Gerry Lougheed, a local Liberal fundraiser, are facing bribery charges

Act.

They’re accused of offering would-be candidate Andrew Olivier a job or appointmen­t to get him to step aside for Premier Kathleen Wynne’s preferred candidate in a 2015 byelection in Sudbury.

Both have pleaded guilty.

Under cross-examinatio­n Friday, Olivier said he believed Sorbara and Lougheed were talking about positions within the Liberal party, and neither under the Election not directly said they could get him a public appointmen­t.

The defence lawyers’ position is that the conversati­ons involved internal party nomination processes, and not the public electoral process of becoming a candidate, which is governed by the Election Act.

Wynne’s preferred candidate was Glenn Thibeault — at the time an NDP MP, now the Ontario energy minister — who she ultimately appointed as the candidate and who went on to win the byelection.

Court heard Thursday that one of the two charges Sorbara faces relates to an allegation that Thibeault asked for paid jobs on his byelection campaign for two constituen­cy office staffers, and that Sorbara granted that request.

Thibeault has previously denied he sought anything that would be seen as a bribe in exchange for running and is not charged with any offences.

The premier herself is set to testify on Wednesday.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Witness Andrew Olivier arrives on the second day in the Election Act bribery trial in Sudbury, Ont.
CP PHOTO Witness Andrew Olivier arrives on the second day in the Election Act bribery trial in Sudbury, Ont.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada