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RPT-UPDATE 2-Canada PM unaware of payment made to quiet ethics scandal: ex-aide

Published 2015-08-12, 05:26 p/m
© Reuters.  RPT-UPDATE 2-Canada PM unaware of payment made to quiet ethics scandal: ex-aide
ONEX
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(Repeats to add UPDATE 2 tag to headline)
By David Ljunggren
OTTAWA, Aug 12 (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister Stephen
Harper did not know that in order to quiet an ethics scandal his
former chief of staff had secretly repaid expenses claimed by
the senator at the heart of the affair, the ex-aide testified on
Wednesday.
The trial of Conservative Senator Mike Duffy, who is accused
of receiving a bribe and abusing expense claims, comes as Harper
campaigns ahead of Canada's Oct. 19 election. Opposition parties
say the affair shows voters should end the Conservatives' near
10-year grip on power.
Nigel Wright, Harper's former chief of staff, told an Ottawa
courtroom that he decided in early 2013 that the only way to
kill a raging scandal about Duffy's expense claims was to
secretly give the senator his own personal check for C$90,000
($69,400) so Duffy could repay the money.
There was concern by Conservatives at the time that the
Duffy case was becoming a major embarrassment for the party,
which took power in 2006 promising to clean up federal politics.
Asked by prosecutors whether he had told Harper about the
check given to Duffy, Wright replied simply: "No."
His testimony appeared to support Harper's longstanding
insistence that he knew nothing about Wright helping Duffy repay
his expenses.
"Mr. Wright was working with Mr. Duffy to make sure he did
repay them, and that's what we were told was going to happen,"
Harper said in response to reporters' questions in Vancouver.
"When I found out that is not what happened, that in fact
they had been repaid by somebody else, we made that information
public and I took the appropriate action."
Wright left his job in May 2013 after his check became
public. Harper initially said Wright had resigned but amid
increasing uproar over the case, later said he had fired him.
Wright told the court he had made a significant error by
misjudging how the check would be interpreted.
Harper was heading to Canada's north to campaign. The
opposition New Democratic Party - neck and neck with the
Conservatives in opinion polls - said the trip was strategically
timed.
"Nigel Wright might be on the witness stand, but it's
Stephen Harper who's on trial," said NDP leader Thomas Mulcair.
Wright said he initially thought Duffy had inappropriately
claimed C$32,000 in living expenses. To avoid the scandal from
spreading, he persuaded the Conservative Party to cover the
cost.
Wright said he told Harper that Duffy would repay the
C$32,000 but did not mention the party's promise to provide the
money.
He then wrote an email to aides saying "We are good to go
from the PM," which opposition parties say shows Harper knew
about the secret payment. Wright said it merely meant he had
informed Harper of the outline of the initial agreement.
The party subsequently pulled out of the deal on learning
that Duffy owed C$90,000, not $32,000, in expenses.
"I was beyond furious," said Wright, a millionaire Onex Corp
OCX.TO executive. He nevertheless gave Duffy his check on the
grounds he had already promised Duffy that he would not need to
repay the expenses out of his own funds.
($1=$1.30 Canadian)

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