Carleton-Mississippi Mills
Conservative Association

Info Links

Home

Contact Us

Contact Gordon

Events

About The Riding

About the Association

Board of Directors

About Our MP

Newsletter Archive

E-notification Signup


Call To Action

Membership

Volunteer

Donations

Take A Lawnsign


Useful Links

 
  Goulbourn        Kanata        Mississippi Mills         West Carleton


Director of Public Prosecutions

Disclaimer: Below is an html textual representation of the official policy announcement from the Conservative Party Of Canada. It has ONLY been altered for visual presentation. To view a copy of the official release in .pdf format, click here.

THE ISSUE

The Liberal Party’s 12 years in power have been 12 years of consecutive scandal. Despite Paul Martin’s promises to clean up Ottawa, nothing has changed. Worse, the Liberals have made no attempt to ensure that those responsible for these scandals pay the price – and they still pretend they are victims in the sponsorship scandal!1

Judge Gomery concluded that the Liberal Party “as an institution cannot escape responsibility for the misconduct of its officers and representatives.”2 Unfortunately, the current system of lap-dog oversight means Liberals get to hold themselves accountable. They negotiated with themselves to calculate how much taxpayers’ money the Liberal Party would repay.3 They cut a deal letting Paul Coffin repay only $1 million even though he stole $1.6 million by fraud.4

Additional examples of the need for prosecutorial independence:

• François Beaudoin, former president of the Business Development Bank of Canada, was subjected to a vendetta after refusing the prime minister’s request to give a loan to a personal friend. The vendetta included complaints to the RCMP that Justice André Denis of the Québec Superior Court later called “completely vexatious and without foundation.” After the Crown Attorney concluded that there was no reason to charge Beaudoin, the government-owned Bank, headed by a political appointee, refused to accept the outcome and hired a lawyer to try (unsuccessfully) to influence the prosecutor to change the decision.5

• The Mulroney-Airbus affair: Officials in the federal Department of Justice advised the RCMP during its investigation and it was the Justice Department that signed and sent the letter asking the Swiss authorities to cooperate. The Department’s letter wrongly indicated that the RCMP had reached conclusions about criminal activity and then-Attorney General Allan Rock subsequently apologized in writing. To avoid any possibility of interference, this is precisely the sort of issue that should have been handled by an independent Director of Public Prosecutions.

THE PLAN

The Conservatives have already released the Federal Accountability Act. In addition to those measures, and to ensure prosecutorial independence, a Conservative government will follow the path of several provinces, including Nova Scotia and British Columbia, and other parliamentary democracies such as the United Kingdom and Australia.

Nova Scotia passed a Public Prosecutions Act in 1990 in response to the report and recommendations of the Royal Commission on the Donald Marshall, Jr. Under this statute, the responsibility for all crown prosecutions under the Criminal Code or provincial law was transferred from the Attorney General’s department to the independent Director of Public Prosecutions. The Director is the head of the provincial public prosecution service, and reports directly to the House of Assembly. British Columbia passed a Crown Counsel Act in 1991 in response to a controversy over prosecutorial decisions affecting a provincial MLA, and a subsequent Commission of Inquiry conducted by Stephen Owen (now a federal Liberal cabinet minister). Under the B.C. statute, the Assistant Deputy Attorney General has responsibility for criminal prosecutions. The Attorney General, or the Deputy Attorney General can only give direction in an individual case in writing and the direction must be published in the British Columbia Gazette.

The Assistant Deputy Attorney General may appoint a special prosecutor in cases of important public interest. A Conservative government will establish an independent Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). The DPP will have responsibility to conduct prosecutions under federal law and will be able to make binding and final decisions to prosecute or not unless the Attorney General or Deputy Attorney General instructs the Director to do otherwise by means of a public written notice. The DPP will be appointed form among qualified candidates recommended by a committee which will include representatives of the opposition
parties in Parliament. The DPP will have a mandate to review recent decision on prosecutions in the sponsorship scandal and other matters which have been the subject of investigation by the Auditor General and the Ethics Counselor or Commissioner. The structure of the office will be based on best practices in other jurisdictions.

THE CHOICE

The Liberals have failed to move swiftly and decisively to find justice in the sponsorship scandal. They continue to be distracted by their scandals and have been trying to micro-manage the response to the scandal. Only the Conservatives will create an independent body to make binding and final decisions to prosecute those responsible for breaking the public trust. Only a Conservative government can get on with the job of governing, to deliver accountable government that Canadians deserve.

1 Liberal Party of Canada, News Release, “Liberal Party Announces Measures in Response to the Gomery Report” (November 1,2005).
2 Who is Responsible: Fact Finding Report, p. 435.
3 “Justice Minister Irwin Cotler said the Liberal government and the Liberal Party have come to a common understanding that $1-million is appropriate”: Daniel Leblanc, “Opposition Turns Up Heat on Two Fronts,” The Globe and Mail (November 4, 2005), p. A4.
4 Department of Public Works and Government Services, News Release, “Government of Canada Announces First Success in Agreement to Recover Sponsorship Funds” (August 16, 2005).
5 The entire story is recounted in the Court’s judgment, Beaudoin v. Business Development Bank of Canada (February 6, 2004), Quebec Superior Court, Court File No. 500-05-061128-003, Denis J., at paragraphs 608-615.

  EMail This Post EMail This Post

Filed under: Policy — Communications Director @ 8:00 am on November 30, 2005

Santa Claus Is Coming To Town

Prime Minister Paul Martin, who had been playing Santa Claus at the taxpayers expense before the January election was not on hand at the Kanata Santa Claus Parade. But our MP, Gordon O’Connor was. Below are pictures of the event, held on November 19th, 2005. Pictures are courtesy Elizabeth Cabrera. Thank you Elizabeth.

Click on an image to view a larger version.


A Crowd Of Conservatives

- A Crowd Of Conservatives


Buckets Of Support

- Buckets Of Support


Max Keeping with Gordon O'Connor

- Max Keeping with Gordon O’Connor


Max Mixes With Crowd of Conservatives

- Max mixes with a crowd of Conservatives


Happy To See An Honest Politician

- Happy to see an honest politician


Our Team Mingles

- Our team mingles


Our Team Recruits The Youth

- Grow up and vote Conservative


The Price Is For The Car - Conservatives Are Not For Sale - Unlike Other Parties


- The price is for the car – Conservatives are not for sale, unlike some other parties

The Star Of The Parade

- The Star of the parade


Happy Holidays From Gordon

- Happy Holidays from Gordon


  EMail This Post EMail This Post

Filed under: Events — Communications Director @ 1:35 pm on November 20, 2005




List of Upcoming Events
(click Event below for details)

Our Member Of Parliament

The Honourable
Gordon O'Connor

(contact Gordon)


Online Poll
Of The Month

Do you agree that allowing new companies to enter the cell phone space will create more competitive pricing for Canadian cell phone users?

Yes

No

Not Sure


View Results

Loading ... Loading ...

Polls Archive


National Party
News Releases
09/08/2010
PM visits Nanaimo cruise ship terminal
more info


09/02/2010
PM opens London airport’s cargo terminal
more info


09/02/2010
PM announces improvements for tri-cities commuters
more info


08/30/2010
Statement by the Prime Minister of Canada
more info


08/30/2010
PM announces Parliamentary Secretary nominations
more info


08/24/2010
PM announces High Arctic Research Station coming to Cambridge Bay
more info


08/23/2010
PM announces improvements at Churchill Airport
more info


08/20/2010
Statement by the Prime Minister of Canada
more info


08/20/2010
PM announces support for Wind Energy project in Prince Edward Island
more info


08/20/2010
PM takes part in famous Gold Cup Parade
more info


.
Send comments to: Webmaster Copyright © 2005-2007 Carleton-Mississippi Mills EDA
All rights reserved.
Privacy Statement