Win or lose, Mike Duffy has left his mark on the Senate
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March 27, 2015
The RCMP investigation into Mike Duffy and other senators has cost the force close to $1 million.
On Jan. 29, 2014, Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau walked into room 160-S of the Centre Block – a bright, artificially lit room adorned with aboriginal art – and met with his 32 senators. “The Senate is broken and needs to be fixed,” he flatly told them.
Minutes later, Trudeau emerged to inform stunned reporters that he had just turfed those 32 senators from the Liberal caucus.
It was an unprecedented move – particularly for a party that had fallen to third place in the House of Commons but had retained some political punch in part because of its robust Senate presence.
Yet such has been the fallout from the Mike Duffy affair that even the Liberals hastened to put distance between themselves and the red chamber.
Win or lose his criminal trial, Duffy has caused huge ripple effects on the Senate, starting with the suspension of two other senators without pay, the hasty retirement of a third, and a full auditor general probe, still underway, into Senate spending habits.
Here’s a glance at the fallout to-date:
1. Bookkeeping upgrades
In the wake of the misspending allegations against Duffy, the Senate has taken a hard look at itself. Senators reviewed spending rules, set limits on international travel, ordered regular training for senators and staff on filing expense claims, and killed the so-called honour code for senators that said they were presumed to “act on their personal honour … unless and until the Senate or the internal economy committee determines otherwise.”
2. Transparency boost
Despite protestations that the Senate was more transparent than the House of Commons – its members already had to post quarterly expense reports, and the committee overseeing internal spending often met in public (unlike the Commons Board of Internal Economy) – Duffy’s case raised doubts about those efforts: He had publicly expensed housing claims for years before being questioned by reporters, even though senators could have challenged him at any time.
So senators began posting more detailed expense reports on their own accord in 2013. Conservatives Linda Frum and Bob Runciman, for instance, posted their expenses to their personal websites, using a reporting template created by fellow Conservative Sen. Doug Black, who had been posting his expenses long before the Senate scandal broke. The rest of the Senate and even MPs soon followed.
3. A sprawling audit
Federal Auditor General Michael Ferguson plunged in. In June, he is expected to release the results of a deep probe into Senate spending. Ferguson’s teams have been allowed access to every spending corner in the upper chamber, right down to expenses for postage, phone calls and Christmas cards.
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