

“But the Conservative-led Senate majority decided, ‘let’s suspend this guy because he committed administrative errors’. Yet I had the Crown Attorney and the RCMP for 859 days saying I committed fraud. “You had the Deloitte (Senate expense) audits way back in 2013 that said that I had done nothing wrong. Instead, Brazeau, 41, tried to put the hurt on the Conservative’s Senate caucus. Bleeding to death from a self-inflicted wound: Senator Patrick Brazeau reveals his darkest hour.‘I was thrown under the bus, but I survived’: Crown drops expense charges against Senator Patrick Brazeau.This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. “I’d like to say that it’s water under the bridge, but I don’t believe it is.”Īsked if he had anything to say to Harper, the now-independent senator bit his tongue: “He can now resign from his seat because he’s knows that he won’t have to testify in any Senate-related scandal,” he replied. “This is a happy moment for myself and my family and now it’s time to move on, time to get back to the work that I loved and I’m going to continue to love, and I look forward to representing Canadians in the Senate once again.” “Everything that’s happened in the last three years, because of the suspension, led me to being what I was not.

“The last couple of years have been an emotional rollercoaster for me, personally and professionally,” Brazeau began, sitting stiffly behind his desk in a dark pinstriped suit, silver earrings and corkscrew ponytail.

