Saskatchewan

NDP urges Sask. Party committee members to show up for meeting that could launch bullying investigation

At the heart of the dispute are allegations made by Weekes last month that he had been bullied, harassed and intimidated by government members and staff and that former House leader Jeremy Harrison had brought a gun to the legislature.

House services committee to meet Monday

Clouds gather over the Saskatchewan Legislative Building in Regina, Sask., on Oct. 20, 2023.
The Saskatchewan House services committee meeting is set for Monday at 11 a.m. (Noemie Rondeau/CBC-Radio-Canada)

A Monday morning meeting has been set for a committee that could start the process into reviewing allegations made by Speaker Randy Weekes, but it remains to be seen whether members of the government caucus will show up. 

The Saskatchewan NDP say it's a test of leadership for the government. 

"Leadership is about not just making rules for other people. It's about holding yourself accountable as well. And this is not something that we see from this government," said NDP Leader Carla Beck. 

Weekes announced late on Thursday in a letter to members of the House services committee that he had scheduled a meeting Monday morning. 

At the heart of the dispute are allegations made by Weekes last month that he had been bullied, harassed and intimidated by government members and staff. 

He also alleged that former government House leader Jeremy Harrison brought a firearm into the Saskatchewan Legislative building at some point in the past.

After initially denying all allegations, Harrison would later admit that he had brought a hunting rifle into the building. He then resigned as government House leader. 

The NDP have called for an investigation and last week, the Opposition sent a second letter asking the committee to consider two motions in a meeting:

  • Appointing an independent investigator.
  • Calling Premier Scott Moe, Jeremy Harrison, Lori Carr and others to answer questions about allegations made by the Speaker.

The government has already indicated they will not accept the NDP's request, saying there is a "clear process for dealing with allegations of harassment." 

WATCH | Sask. Speaker accuses government MLAs of trying to influence his decisions: 

Sask. Speaker accuses government MLAs of trying to influence his decisions

7 months ago
Duration 7:42
On his final day of the spring sitting, Sask. Speaker of the Legislative Assembly Randy Weekes spoke at length about his experience in the position. He accused Saskatchewan Party MLAs of trying to influence his decisions as Speaker with 'intimidating and harassing text messages.' He read into the record several examples of text messages he said he had received.

On Friday, Saskatchewan NDP Leader Carla Beck urged Sask. Party MLAs to show up.

"I think they need to show up and to answer to these allegations, again, not just of [Speaker Randy Weekes], but there were other allegations that were made of staff, about staff in the building," Beck said during a news conference in Saskatoon. 

The committee has eight members: four government MLAs including Harrison and current House Leader Lori Carr, the Speaker and three opposition MLAs. 

Five members are required to attend for the committee to meet quorum so if the Sask. Party MLAs don't show up, the meeting cannot go ahead. 

The meeting is scheduled to begin at 11 a.m. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Alexander Quon has been a reporter with CBC Saskatchewan since 2021 and is happy to be back working in his hometown of Regina after half a decade in Atlantic Canada. He has previously worked with the CBC News investigative unit in Nova Scotia and Global News in Halifax. Alexander specializes in municipal political coverage and data-reporting. He can be reached at: alexander.quon@cbc.ca.