Senate’s old guard and new guard clash over role of independent senators
OTTAWA — Two senators are seeking disciplinary measures against one another in what boils down to a clash between the new and old guards in the Senate.
The dispute is between Sen. Pierre Dalphond, one of the new, more independent, less partisan senators, and Sen. Don Plett, leader of the Conservative Senate caucus, the last remaining unabashedly partisan group in the upper house.
It revolves around Dalphond’s accusation last month that Plett was preventing the launch of a long-awaited and legally required parliamentary review of Canada’s medically assisted dying regime.
Dalphond, a member of the Progressive Senate Group, told The Canadian Press that Plett was refusing to name a Conservative senator to sit on a special joint parliamentary committee until he got a guarantee that his choice would also be named committee co-chair — a “blank cheque” that Dalphond said he and other independent-minded senators on the committee were not prepared to give.