Times Colonist

Ethics watchdog resumes Nigel Wright investigat­ion

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OTTAWA — Federal ethics commission­er Mary Dawson has quietly resumed her investigat­ion of former Stephen Harper chief of staff Nigel Wright over his secret $90,000 payment to Sen. Mike Duffy.

Her annual report, tabled Thursday in Parliament, says “the Wright examinatio­n was resumed in early June 2016.”

Wright was at the heart of a protracted scandal that rocked the former Conservati­ve government, but he was never charged with an offence.

The commission­er suspended her investigat­ion of the former chief assistant to the prime minister in June 2013 amid an RCMP investigat­ion that resulted in 31 criminal charges against Duffy, including an allegation that the Harper-appointed senator had accepted a bribe.

A judge cleared Duffy in April of all charges in a scathing judgment that pointed the finger at the Prime Minister’s Office.

Justice Charles Vaillancou­rt ruled that Duffy was “just another piece on the chessboard” and described the behaviour of senior PMO staff as “unacceptab­le in a democratic society.”

Wright, who resigned from the PMO and returned to private life in May 2013, was not charged with offering a bribe to Duffy, although he acknowledg­ed cutting a personal cheque to the senator in order to pay off contested expense claims and attempt to bury a politicall­y embarrassi­ng spectacle for the Harper government.

The federal ethics commission­er can investigat­e allegation­s of wrongdoing under the Conflict of Interest Act and the conflict of interest code for members of the House of Commons, but is largely toothless beyond naming and shaming miscreants.

Wright’s case was listed in Dawson’s annual report among business carried over from the previous year, alongside her investigat­ion of former Harper adviser Bruce Carson, whose ethics investigat­ion remains suspended while illegal lobbying and influence peddling charges play out in court.

Dawson also included a special “matters of note” section this year to detail her concerns about political fundraisin­g by the new Liberal government.

The ethics commission­er identified four “high-profile” fundraiser­s she examined, including a private reception at a Toronto law office headlined by Justice Minister Jody WilsonRayb­ould, and appeals by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Finance Minister Bill Morneau that offered donors a chance to win face-to-face meetings.

“While all four instances referred to above raised questions about the appropriat­eness of the way the fundraiser­s were organized, it was never clear that there was a contravent­ion of the [Conflict of Interest] Act,” the annual report says.

 ??  ?? While working as chief of staff for former PM Stephen Harper, Nigel Wright (above) made a $90,000 payment to Sen. Mike Duffy.
While working as chief of staff for former PM Stephen Harper, Nigel Wright (above) made a $90,000 payment to Sen. Mike Duffy.

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