Senate holds off on forcing Lynn Beyak to take down 'racist' letters from her website - Action News
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Politics

Senate holds off on forcing Lynn Beyak to take down 'racist' letters from her website

Members of the Senates all-powerful internal economy committee punted a request from some senators to force Lynn Beyak to remove controversial what some have called racist letters from her website.

The letters will be on display pending outcome of review by Senate ethics officer

Non-affiliated Sen. Lynn Beyak has posted letters from supporters to her Senate website that Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer has called 'racist.' (CBC)

Members of the Senate's all-powerful internal economy committee punted a request from some senators to force Lynn Beyak to remove controversial what some including Conservative Leader Andrew Scheerhave called racist letters from her website, meaning they will remain on display for now.

Independent B.C. Sen.Larry Campbell, the chair of the committee, said Thursday he saw no need to force Beyak to remove the letters at this time as she is currentlysubject to a probe by the Senate ethics officer. Conservative Newfoundland and Labrador Sen.Elizabeth Marshall agreed, saying the ethics officer should be allowed to complete his review of Beyak's conduct without interference.

However, as another member of the committee, IndependentRaymondeSaint-Germainnoted, nothing about that probe would preclude the internal economy committee from forcing her to take down offensive material from a website paid for by public funds.

Independent B.C. Sen. Larry Campbell says the Senate ethics officer should conduct a preliminary review of Beyak's behaviour before she is forced to remove racist letters from her website. (CBC)

"I think we need to distinguish between the Senate ethics officer's role from the role of this internal economy committee, which has a responsibilityto ensurethe wise use of resources that are funded by taxpayers, paid for by public money given to senators,"she said in French."This committee must take on its responsibilities so that Senate resources are used for the purposes to which they are attributed."

The internal economycommitteeadjudicates disputes, sets office budgets and polices the expenses ofsenators, among many other responsibilities.

In response, Campbell,appointed as a Liberal by former prime minister Paul Martin,said,"To enter into a second investigation on what is basically the same topic would be a cross purposes, and may hinder the work that the Senate ethics officer does."

The Senate ethics officer is in the midst of a preliminary review of Beyak's actions after she defended the Indian residential school system and posted letters from supporters that included derogatory language about Indigenous people, conduct some senators believe is in contravention of the Red Chamber's ethics codenamely that she did not "uphold the highest standards of dignity inherent to the position of Senator."

Review could take months

However, such areview could take many months and may actually be dropped without any actionand the letters could be on public display indefinitely in the meantime.

Campbell conceded"there is no deadline on it there is an urgency to it, but it's not immediacy. I think the process should go ahead and then we'll be in a position to decide where we go from there."

Despite Saint-Germain's comments, the committee agreed to stand down on the request and await the outcome of the preliminary review.

One letter posted on Beyak's website saidIndigenous people "should be very grateful" for residential schools.

"Where would they be today if it were not for the residential schoolthat were set up to help them? I expect they would still be living out in their isolated villages, un educated, a very high rate of child birth deaths, an very short life expectancy, and living in very damp cold dwellings," it stated.

A screenshot shows Sen. Lynn Beyak's personal Senate website. (lynnbeyak.sencanada.ca)

"I'm noanthropolgistbut it seems every opportunistic culture,subsistancehunter/gatherers seeks to get what they can for no effort,"readanother.

"There is always a clash between an industrial/ organized farming culture that values effort as opposed to a culture that will sit and wail until the government gives them stuff."

After the letters came to light and Beyak refused to remove them citing a right to free speechScheerfinally removed Beyak from the Tory caucus.

The move camenearly a year after she first mounted that defence of residential schools, while criticizing the work of the Truth and Reconciliation Commissionfor not "focusing on the good."

Scheersaid promoting these commentswas "unacceptable for a Conservative parliamentarian."

"To suggest that Indigenous Canadians are lazy compared to other Canadians, is simply racist,"he said in a statement. "Racism will not be tolerated in the Conservative caucus or Conservative Party of Canada."