Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Senate And P.E.I. Gear Up For Mike Duffy's Expected Return This Week

IANS, 01 May, 2016 12:16 PM
    CHARLOTTETOWN — Canadians could be forgiven for assuming P.E.I. residents are all feeling a sense of relief as Sen. Mike Duffy — the Island's most high-profile political export — prepares to return to the Senate this week after a three-year hiatus punctuated by intrigue, scandal and, finally, vindication in a court of law.
     
    But that's not the way things work on the Island, where there are lingering doubts about Duffy's connection to Canada's smallest province and his expense claims.
     
    On the sun-drenched streets of Charlottetown, where the icy wind off the Northumberland Strait keeps the city in a deep freeze, residents say they understand why the former TV personality was cleared last month on all 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery.
     
    But that doesn't mean they're ready to accept what happened and move on.
     
    "There really didn't seem to be any laws broken, and you can't be found guilty of something if there's no rules," said Charlottetown resident Scott MacBurnie, commenting on the Senate's vague spending rules and residency requirements that were at the heart of Duffy's trial.
     
    "But it's embarrassing to think that he's a senator from P.E.I. and that he's still a senator. I'm embarrassed for the Island ... You'd think he would be decent enough to say I'm not really a senator from P.E.I. because I don't live there, and he would step down rather than going back."
     
    Duffy has been living for years in an Ottawa suburb, but maintains a summer home in P.E.I. that he claimed as his primary residence when he was appointed to the upper chamber by former Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper in 2008.
     
    Whether or not that home should qualify him for a Senate seat was an issue from the very day he was named, throughout his trial, and still, apparently, in P.E.I. itself.
     
     
     
    "Mike Duffy wasn't qualified to be in the Senate in the first place, so why is he going back?" asked Charlottetown resident Alan Hoy, a man with a close-cropped grey beard, wearing sunglasses and a Montreal Canadiens tuque. "He wasn't a resident."
     
    Alex Forrest, a young, stocky man from Summerside, P.E.I., said the intense scrutiny that Duffy faced in court should be extended to all of his colleagues in the upper chamber.
     
    "It's not just him who got away with it, he's just the only one who got caught," he said.
     
    The Senate continues to grapple with the fallout from the Duffy affair.
     
    While its expenses system has been overhauled since the scandal broke, two other senators still face a trial and a third is awaiting to hear if charges will be laid.
     
    Seven former senators are currently at risk of being taken to court to get them to pay back some $528,000 in expenses the auditor general found were improperly claimed.
     
    "The lesson is: don't hate the player, hate the game," said Rob Lantz, who stepped down as leader of the province's Progressive Conservative party until just after the P.E.I. Liberals won the most recent general election.
     
    "The larger question is about the Senate in general and how they govern themselves ... Mr. Duffy is entitled to walk back into the senate as a vindicated man, as far as I'm concerned."
     
     
     
    Now that Duffy's been cleared, Senate rules allow him to walk right in when the upper chamber resumes Tuesday and take his seat. He'll sit as an independent, as he's not being welcomed back into the Conservative caucus.
     
    To what extent the entire Senate caucus will embrace him is unknown. Duffy was suspended by the Senate, losing his pay and privileges, in 2013, long before the criminal charges were laid. While his pay resumed once the last session of Parliament was resolved, there has been a question of whether he's entitled to back pay.
     
    "Any decision relating to that suspension, including retroactive sessional allowance, would also rest with and require a motion in the Chamber," said Senate Law Clerk Michel Patrice in a statement.
     
    Conservative Sen. Leo Housakos, chair of the internal economy committee, told CTV Question Period that while a motion can be put forward to overturn the decision about his pay, he didn't think there would be "much of an appetite" for senators to revisit the issue.
     
    Charlottetown resident Lori Fry-Gordon was quick to defend Duffy.
     
    "We support our own here," she said. "I'm glad to see him back in the Senate ... He is from Prince Edward Island. If he chooses to live somewhere closer to his job, then so be it."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Psychiatrist Tells Guy Turcotte's Trial He Was Anxious, Suicidal After Arrest

    The first psychiatrist to see Guy Turcotte after his arrest and transfer to a mental hospital in 2009 says he diagnosed him with an anxiety adjustment disorder and says he was in a suicidal state.

    Psychiatrist Tells Guy Turcotte's Trial He Was Anxious, Suicidal After Arrest

    This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise

    This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise
    For Mahalia Meeuwsen and her husband Mike, just having one baby seemed like a miracle.

    This B.C. Couple Hoping For One Baby Gets One-In-50-Million Triplets Surprise

    Justin Trudeau And Family To Live In Rideau Cottage, Not 24 Sussex

    Justin Trudeau And Family To Live In Rideau Cottage, Not 24 Sussex
    The cottage is actually a two-storey Georgian Revival brick home built in 1866-67 to serve as a home for the secretary to the governor general

    Justin Trudeau And Family To Live In Rideau Cottage, Not 24 Sussex

    Indian-Canadian Son Charged With Murdering 41-Year-Old Mother In Mississauga

    Indian-Canadian Son Charged With Murdering 41-Year-Old Mother In Mississauga
    Kunal Bhavan, 20, was arrested and charged with second-degree murder for the death of his 41-year-old mother Vaishali Patel 

    Indian-Canadian Son Charged With Murdering 41-Year-Old Mother In Mississauga

    CMHC Expects Housing Market To Moderate; Starts, Sales To Slow In 2016 And 2017

    CMHC Expects Housing Market To Moderate; Starts, Sales To Slow In 2016 And 2017
    The average MLS price is forecast at between $417,000 and $459,000 this year with a point forecast of $437,700, before rising to between $420,000 and $466,000 in 2016

    CMHC Expects Housing Market To Moderate; Starts, Sales To Slow In 2016 And 2017

    Winnipeg Teen Girl Shot With Gun Allegedly Stolen From RCMP Vehicle At Officer's Home

    Winnipeg Teen Girl Shot With Gun Allegedly Stolen From RCMP Vehicle At Officer's Home
    Winnipeg police say a 16-year-old girl was shot early Saturday morning after an altercation in a convenience store parking lot.

    Winnipeg Teen Girl Shot With Gun Allegedly Stolen From RCMP Vehicle At Officer's Home