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Politics

Mike Duffy's 1st day of cross-examination marked by testy exchanges

Mike Duffy's first day under cross-examination was marked by a series of testy exchanges with the Crown, which included sparring over the senator's reluctance to "gossip" about former prime minister Stephen Harper.

Crown will continue questioning at senator's fraud trial on Thursday

Mike Duffy and his lawyer Donald Bayne leave court

9 years ago
Duration 1:26
It was Duffy's first day of being cross examined by the Crown

Mike Duffy's first day under cross-examination was marked by a series of testy exchanges with the Crown, which includedsparring over the senator's reluctance to "gossip" about former prime minister Stephen Harper.

Duffy was clearly annoyed at times by some of the questions being asked of him by Crown prosecutor Mark Holmes.

In one exchange, Holmes pressedDuffyon his previous testimony that he told Harper he wanted to be appointed as a senator from Ontario.

Duffy said his request hadnothing to do with him being a resident of Ontario.Instead, Duffy said, he was concerned about the reaction among P.E.I. Conservatives who may have had other candidates in mind.

But he also offered another reason.

"If you really want to know why I wanted to go in from Ontario, it was becauseof my precarioushealth," he said, adding that going back and forth from P.E.I. would take atoll.

Holmes then asked if Duffy had been telling the truth when he said that he preferred an Ontario appointment because of local P.E.I. political concerns.

Duffy said there were anumber of factors involved.

"You didn't ask whetherhealth was a factor in Ontario and I didn't volunteer it. I'm not withholding anything. I'm just trying to preserve a shred, just a tiny shred of dignity andprivacy," Duffy said."Bank records, bank account numbers, you've put it all out to everyone withoutthe slightest bit of concern for anyone else's privacy."

Duffy has pleaded not guilty to 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery related to expenses he claimed as a senator and later repaid in March 2013 with $90,000 fromNigelWright. At the time, Wright was Harper's chief of staff.

Meeting with the prime minister

Holmes alsozeroed in on oneJune 2008meeting Duffy testified aboutthe first meeting the senator said he had in Harper's office.

Duffy previously testified he had been ushered into Harper's office to hear abouta small error he had made on his broadcast about the public debt.

Duffy said they also discussed the appointment of new CBC presidentHubertLacroix, who, Duffy testified, had just been named to that position.

But Holmes pointed out thatLacroixhad been appointed in November 2007, made effective in January2008, six months earlier.

"When HubertLacroix was appointed,I was also invited to [Harper's]office," Duffy said."Somaybe the June date was not Hubert Lacroix, but I knowabout the conversationwithHubert Lacroix because I remembered it very clearly andIknow it was in the Centre Block."

Holmes asked Duffy if he had realizedthe courthad relied on his testimony of that meeting of being truthful and accurate.

"To the best asI could remember it," Duffy responded.

Holmes askedDuffy to check his diary to see if he put this Harper meeting and appointment conversation into the diary. Duffy said he didn'thave his diary in the courtroom Wednesday, but wouldcheck and bring it back on Thursday.

Recalls Harper 'eating a hot dog'

Earlier,Holmes hadfocused on a particular detail of that June 2008 meeting in which Duffysaid hebeen ushered in pasttop military officials who were standing there waiting to meet with Harper. Duffy suggested that by doing this, Harper was puttingpolitics ahead of policy.

ButHolmes suggested those senior officials could have been waiting for someone else before going to see Harperand that there may have been nothing untoward by having Duffy see Harper before them.

A clearly annoyedDuffy asked Holmes if he wanted to go throughall the times that peoplewere kept waiting while "the prime minister ate a hot dog and somebody ironed his shirt?"

"Yes, please, go ahead," Holmes said.
Cross-examination of Senator Mike Duffy by the Crown will continue Thursday. Duffy has pleaded not guilty to 31 charges of fraud, breach of trust and bribery related to expenses he claimed as a senator. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Duffy recounted oneConservativerally in P.E.I. in which attendees, many of them seniors,had been kept waiting for over an hour.

"The prime minister was sitting there in his undershirt eating a hotdog and one ofthe female staffers was doing what the 'little woman' should. She was ironing his shirt."

Duffy said that for a prime minister whoportrayedhimselfas apopulist, he consideredit rude behaviour

When Holmes asked Duffy to provide another example of this type of behaviour by the prime minister, Duffy said: "I'm not going to go further down this road of digging up gossip."

Duffy denies seeking to becomea senator

Holmes also questionedDuffy about whetherhe hadever lobbied to become a senator.

Duffy said he never did,rejectingstories suggesting he had approached former prime minister Jean Chrtienfor the appointment.

"If one really wanted an appointment, don't you think the wrong way to go about it would be to walk up to the prime minister and say, 'Hey, I want to be a senator,'" Duffy testified Wednesday.

Duffy told the courtit would be "crass" to approach a prime minister to ask for a Senate position. It's not the way he was brought up or how the system works, he added.

Duffy said Chrtien, during aroast, had once mentioned that Duffy came up to him and said, 'I'm ready, I'm ready' in terms of a Senate appointment, but the senator stressed the prime minister was just joking.

With files from John Paul Tasker