Liberal Sen. Colin Kenny resigning months before December retirement date


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Sen. Colin Kenny will renounce his chair months before his scheduled retirement date, CBC News has confirmed.


The Senate Speaker’s bureau says it perceived a minute from Rideau Hall informing Speaker George Furey that Friday will be a Liberal senator’s final day.


Kenny was due to retire in Dec when he reaches a imperative retirement age of 75. His departure, therefore, comes 10 months progressing than expected.


CBC News has not seen Kenny’s abdication minute and a Speaker’s bureau pronounced a essence are confidential. But a Canadian Press reported passages of a minute Wednesday, with Kenny citing ill-health as a reason for his resignation.


“I consider we have finished my bit … It has been my good payoff to offer my nation over a final forty-four years, both in a bureau of Prime Minister (Pierre) Trudeau and as a member of a Senate,” Canadian Press quoted his minute as saying.


Kenny, named to a Senate by former primary apportion Pierre Trudeau, spent most of his 34-year career in a Red Chamber focused on military, counterclaim and confidence issues. He recently co-authored a news perfectionist a supervision spend some-more income on a armed army risk confronting a rage of U.S. President Donald Trump.


Complaints by former staff


News of Kenny’s depart comes a day after his former staffer, Pascale Brisson, wrote an email to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seeking him to free an examination into her allegations, done in 2013, that Kenny subjected her to passionate harassment.


Kenny denied a allegations during a time and a Senate-appointed questioner privileged him of a allegations. That examination was criticized for refusing to hear complaints brought brazen by other women. In her email to Trudeau, a duplicate of that was achieved by Radio-Canada, Brisson asks that a new examination hear from these women as well.


CBC News has requested acknowledgment from a Prime Minister’s Office that it has perceived a letter. 




A Radio-Canada/CBC News investigation in 2016 suggested Kenny used staff to perform personal tasks around his home and businesses, including engagement aptness sessions and grouping lotions and tanning beds for his tanning business.


In May 2017, a former Senate Ethics Officer, Lyse Ricard, launched a preliminary examination of Kenny’s use of parliamentary resources. A orator for a ethics bureau reliable to CBC News Wednesday that a grave exploration is underway.


Earlier controversy


Kenny has also faced complaints from outward of a Senate.


A former workman during his Ottawa tanning salon business complained to Ottawa Police that Kenny intimately tormented her some-more than a decade ago, including perfectionist passionate favours to keep her job, though a matter was forsaken since a lady had lied to military in a past on another matter.


Other women who worked during Kenny’s business came brazen with identical stories after a initial Radio-Canada story on a case.


Radio-Canada also reported Kenny was a theme of a censure in 2001 by a secretary ubiquitous of a NATO parliamentary assembly, Simon Lunn, who wrote that Kenny done visit phone calls to a womanlike novice and womanlike staff member of a organization. Lunn requested Kenny be private from a Canadian delegation, that did happen.


None of a claims opposite Kenny have been proven in court.


Kenny was also one of 9 senators whom the auditor ubiquitous of Canada endorsed a RCMP investigate over controversial expenses.


In his 2015 report, Michael Ferguson found “the senator paid salaries and advantage losses to staff for work that might not have been for parliamentary business.”


Ferguson stated, “We found that staff achieved countless tasks that were not associated to unchanging bureau operations, though instead to a Senator’s personal activities. These tasks enclosed payments of personal invoices, upkeep of personal books and records, formulation of several personal activities, and scheduling of personal appointments.”


Kenny after repaid some-more than $30,000 in losses that were deemed unjustified.


Three other Senate Liberals have announced early retirements in new days, including Quebec senators Joan Fraser and Charlie Watt and Alberta Sen. Claudette Tardif.


After these retirements, a Liberal congress will have only 11 remaining members.


Article source: http://www.france24.com/en/20170528-libya-jihadist-group-ansar-al-sharia-announces-dissolution

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