Toronto Star

Commons not following rule about MP arrests, PM says

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OTTAWA— Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says a rule in the House of Commons that the Speaker must be informed when a member of Parliament is arrested is not being followed and should be addressed.

This comes after MP Marwan Tabbara, who was re-elected as a Liberal for Kitchener South— Hespeler, was arrested April10 in and charged with assault, break and enter and harassment.

News of the charges against him didn’t come out until June 5, at which point Tabbara issued a statement saying he would be taking a “step back” from the Liberal caucus.

Police in Guelph, Ont., say they didn’t inform the public about the charges against Tabbara because they didn’t believe he posed a significan­t risk to the public.

Trudeau has said his office wasn’t informed of the charges until that day, and he said Friday he remains disappoint­ed Tabbara did not tell the Liberal party or the House of Commons sooner.

He says the House of Commons rule that requires the Speaker be officially notified in the case of an MP arrest has not been followed or enforced much.

“I think there’s perhaps a reflection that that is something that we can look into,” Trudeau said during a Friday in Chelsea, Que., just north of Ottawa.

Tabbara’s case received a routine presumptiv­e adjournmen­t in a virtual court proceeding in Guelph on Friday with a new court date set for Aug. 28.

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