Sudbury·Morning North

Sudbury byelection bribery case bad timing for Liberals says opposition MPP

The scandal surrounding allegations of bribery in the 2015 Sudbury, Ont. byelection, does not come at a good time for the governing Ontario Liberals, says a northeastern Ontario opposition MPP.

Gilles Bisson says it's the first time he can remember such a situation

Gerry Lougheed is charged with bribery under the Elections Act, as is former top Liberal official Pat Sorbara. (Radio-Canada)

The scandal surrounding allegations of bribery in the 2015 Sudbury, Ont. byelection does not come at a good time for the governing Ontario Liberals, says a northeastern Ontario opposition MPP.

Timmins-James Bay New Democrat Gilles Bisson spoke to CBC Sudbury's Morning North program on Thursday and said it's a unique situation.

"It's the first time I think any of us have seen this kind of thing where the chief of staff of the Premier of Ontario gets charged," he said.

Pat Sorbara, Premier Kathleen Wynne's former campaign director and deputy chief of staff, and Gerry Lougheed, a Sudbury Liberal fundraiser, were charged in November 2016 with bribery under the Elections Act, for allegedly offering former Sudbury Liberal candidate Andrew Olivier a job or an appointment in exchange for not running in the byelection.

Sorbara is also accused of bribing Sudbury MPP Glenn Thibeault to quit his job as the city's New Democrat MP and run for the Ontario Liberals.

Lougheed, Sorbara, Thibeault and the Ontario Liberal Party have always maintained their innocence and said they did nothing wrong.

"The timing couldn't be worse for the government," Bisson continued, noting that the court dates, set for September and October, aren't too far away from the 2018 provincial election, set to be held in June.

"I think the quicker they get this thing out of the way, the better they would be — the further away from the election they could make it," he added.
Gilles Bisson, the New Democrat MPP for Timmins-James Bay, says Elections Act charges against two former top Liberal operatives are bad timing for the Ontario Liberals. (CBC)

Lougheed was previously facing criminal charges related to the scandal, with trial dates set for last summer, but those charges were stayed in April 2016 after prosecutors said the Elections Act investigation was complicating the criminal case.

"I don't think this bodes well for the government in a whole bunch of ways, and I don't think it bodes well for democracy either, quite frankly," Bisson said.