Toronto Star

New showdown looms over gas plants

Liberals urged to back down, allow questions at committee, or risk paralyzing legislatur­e

- ROB FERGUSON QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Opposition parties are threatenin­g a new contempt charge that could paralyze Ontario’s legislatur­e unless the government stops “stonewalli­ng” a probe into power plants cancelled before the 2011 election.

That raises the spectre of a showdown, halting the daily question period and debates on bills, like the one that prompted former premier Dalton McGuinty to suspend parliament last October. The only way to avoid it is for Premier Kathleen Wynne’s minority government to back down, allowing MPPs on a committee probing the scandal to ask about questionab­le emails from top Liberals. Those emails urge the Speaker of the legislatur­e to reverse a September 2012 ruling ordering the release of secret documents on the plants in Mississaug­a and Oakville. “An attempt to intimidate the Speaker is contempt of the legislatur­e” and a bid to “hijack democracy,” Conservati­ve House leader Jim Wilson said Wednesday, serving notice of his contempt motion for the legislatur­e’s return Sept. 9. NDP House Leader Gilles Bisson said the government’s best bet is to permit the questions rejected by the committee chair, Liberal MPP Shafiq Qaadri, in the last two hearings. “We could either do that or we can go back to another long debate (on contempt) in the legislatur­e,” said Bisson. Government House leader John Milloy said the Liberals have already expanded the scope of the committee once, but added, “We can sit down and talk about how to move forward.” At issue is a decision last week by Qaadri, who ruled MPPs cannot ask questions about emails from senior McGuinty aides last September that pressed Speaker Dave Levac to change a ruling that found then-energy minister Chris Bentley in a breach of parliament­ary privilege for refusing to release secret documents on plant closings for four months.

Qaadri, advised by a lawyer employed by the legislatur­e, said the emails are outside the committee’s mandate and denies his ruling was partisan.

The emails were written by former McGuinty aide Laura Miller, who said colleague Dave Gene “is putting the member from Brant on notice that we need better here,” and former Liberal campaign director Don Guy, who said: “Speaker needs to follow up on his prima facie finding and change his mind.”

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