Monday, June 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Mike Duffy: Conservative Senator Advised Me To Make Expense Claims

The Canadian Press, 09 Dec, 2015 12:06 PM
    OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy says he was specifically advised by a senior Conservative colleague to file expense claims for his home near Ottawa.
     
    Duffy is testifying for the second day in his own defence, at his trial on charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery.
     
    Duffy says when he was appointed to the Senate in late 2008, he became worried over public criticism that he was not qualified to represent Prince Edward Island because he had lived in the Ottawa area for so long.
     
    He says he was told by Conservative Sen. David Tkachuk, then deputy chairman of the powerful internal economy committee, to file living expenses on the premise that the Ontario home was his secondary residence and his P.E.I. cottage his primary one.
     
    That way, Duffy says he was told, it would help remove any doubt that he was resident in the province he represented.
     
    Duffy has pleaded not guilty to 31 charges, most of which revolve around his living expenses and travel claims.
     
     
    SOME OF WHAT MIKE DUFFY SAID IN HIS OWN DEFENCE ON THE WITNESS STAND TUESDAY
     
     
    OTTAWA — Some quotes from Sen. Mike Duffy's first day of testimony in his own fraud, breach of trust and bribery trial:
    On his years as a cub reporter: "I wasn't a particularly great writer, and I wasn't particularly talented, but I could see what people wanted was output, so I tried to minimize the goofing off during business hours and maximize the throughput."
     
    On covering his first political conventions: "I realized that while it was a spectacle, it was spectacle that mattered because it allowed for the debate and discussion of ideas, and at the end of the day it would affect how every single Canadian lived their lives."
     
    On the breakup of his first marriage: "I lost my kids, they moved away, eventually as far as B.C. I basically had a lost decade. When I walked by a schoolyard, I wondered how my kids were doing."
     
    On having a heart attack three days before his second marriage: "Nothing in my life ... has been simple or straightforward."
     
    On why he, a non-partisan journalist, was appointed to the Senate: "What they were trying to do was put people in the Senate who would in effect provide third-party validation of Stephen Harper as someone Canadians can trust."
     
    On being appointed to represent Prince Edward Island: "I said, going in for P.E.I. would not be popular. I'm from P.E.I., but many people will complain I'm not of P.E.I."
     
    FIVE THINGS TO TAKE AWAY FROM MIKE DUFFY'S FIRST DAY OF TESTIMONY
     
    OTTAWA — Five things to take away from Sen. Mike Duffy's first day of testimony in his own defence:
    1. Duffy travelled on the road with the Canadian rock band The Beavers in the summer of 1964 at the age of 18. The band members, who sported matching Mohawk haircuts, had him travel in advance to cities to set up for their arrival. They later changed their name to the Great Scots.
     
     
    2. Duffy was an ambitious and shrewd young journalist, freelancing stories about football games in his mid-teens, and later working any small radio jobs he could get. In 1967, he paid his own way to Toronto to cover the Progressive Conservative convention for a Halifax radio station.
     
    3. Duffy suffered a heart attack three days before he was set to wed his current wife Heather. The two had met years earlier, when she was his nurse for another ailment. Duffy said he went through a similar emotional conundrum when his daughter was born precisely the same hour that his father passed away.
     
    4. Duffy's health is poor. He takes 12 different medications daily to treat his heart disease, diabetes and ulcers, and sleeps with a device to treat apnea. He has six doctors, and has been a patient with the University of Ottawa Heart Institute for two decades. Duffy has had open heart surgery twice, including two years ago.
     
    5. When Stephen Harper asked him to sit in the Senate in late 2008, Duffy says he suggested he represent Ontario instead of Prince Edward Island. But Duffy says Harper was adamant it be PEI, and was fully aware that Duffy only owned a cottage there that he intended to winterize in the future as a retirement home.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook
    The Bank of Canada said its lower outlook for growth was due to three factors: Canadian oil producers cutting their investment plans, slowing growth in China and non-resource exports faltering — a trend it described as "a puzzle that merits further study."

    Bank Of Canada Cuts Key Rate To 0.5 Per Cent, Slashes Economic Outlook

    Alert Raised At UBC's Point Grey Campus As Police Search For Increasingly Brazen Voyeur

    Alert Raised At UBC's Point Grey Campus As Police Search For Increasingly Brazen Voyeur
    VANCOUVER — Women are being warned about a peeping Tom prowling around two dormitories at the University of British Columbia's Point Grey campus in Vancouver.

    Alert Raised At UBC's Point Grey Campus As Police Search For Increasingly Brazen Voyeur

    Victoria, Montreal And Gatineau, Que., Top Cities For Women To Live In Canada

    Victoria, Montreal And Gatineau, Que., Top Cities For Women To Live In Canada
    TORONTO — A new study says life is better for women who live in cities such as Victoria, Gatineau, Que., and Montreal compared to Edmonton, Calgary and Ontario's Waterloo Region.

    Victoria, Montreal And Gatineau, Que., Top Cities For Women To Live In Canada

    B.C. Crash Investigators Successful In International Search For Irish Witnesses

    B.C. Crash Investigators Successful In International Search For Irish Witnesses
    RCMP in British Columbia are praising the power of social media for helping them find three Irish tourists who may have important information about a deadly crash.

    B.C. Crash Investigators Successful In International Search For Irish Witnesses

    Indian American Driving With Suspended License Accused Of Killing 3 People Faces 50 Years In Prison

    Indian American Driving With Suspended License Accused Of Killing 3 People Faces 50 Years In Prison
    An Indian American, accused of driving with suspended license and allegedly killing three people in a New Jersey road accident, faces up to 50 years in prison if convicted on the second degree multiple count charges

    Indian American Driving With Suspended License Accused Of Killing 3 People Faces 50 Years In Prison

    Rona Ambrose Urges Provinces, Territories To Allow Feds Into Pharmaceutical Alliance

    In a note sent to provincial and territorial health ministers, Ambrose says the federal government has "repeatedly expressed interest" in participating in the Pan-Canadian Pharmaceutical Alliance.

    Rona Ambrose Urges Provinces, Territories To Allow Feds Into Pharmaceutical Alliance