Emails revealed during Sen. Mike Duffyâs trial are shedding light on what was going on in the Prime Ministerâs Office as Stephen Harperâs inner circle attempted to avert an unfolding Senate expense scandal.
The latest emails were introduced in an Ottawa courthouse Thursday, as Duffyâs defence lawyer Donald Bayne cross-examined Nigel Wright, Harperâs former chief of staff and a star witness in the criminal trial.
The long chains of damaging emails date between February and May 2013, and include exchanges between Wright, Duffy, other senators, journalists, legal counsel and various key aides in Harperâs office.
At a campaign stop in Regina on Thursday, Harper insisted he was unaware of the secret plan devised by his own staff to bail out Duffy.
But newly released emails suggest a PMO in crisis.
On May 14, 2013, hours before ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ first broke the story that Nigel Wright paid Duffyâs expense claims, Harperâs then-communications director Andrew MacDougall alerted his inner circle.
âHeads up,â he wrote of the ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ report.
Through email, MacDougall said he spoke to Wright and told CTV âIâm neither confirming nor denying any Nigel involvement.â
Another communications aide, Carl Vallee, asks: âWould the PM know the actual answer to the question? Just in case he asks us.â
Wright replies: âThe PM knows, in broad terms only, that I personally assisted Duffy when I was getting him to agree to repay the expenses.â
But on Thursday, Harper said he only knew one day later, on May 15 of that year.
âMr. Wright has been crystal clear: He did not tell me that, he said that in court,â Harper said. âHe told me that on May the 15th, when I became aware that in fact, Mr. Duffy had not paid the expenses as I had requested, as Mr. Duffy had claimed he had done.
âWhen I found out that was not true, I made it immediately public.â
Emails show the PMO was getting increasingly worried about Duffyâs housing expenses. So Wright asked the prime ministerâs legal counsel, Benjamin Perrin, to look at changing the definition of residency rules.
âI am gravely concerned that Sen. Duffy would be considered a resident of Ontario,â Wright writes.
Perrin then floats the idea âof a more flexible alternative ⌠on main question of what the residency qualification means.â
Wright suggests stacking the Senate committee with Conservatives to endorse the changes, saying: âIf the committee doesnât have the right membership, then the Senate by motion should constitute a special committee that will have the right Senators on board. We cannot rely on the Senate Leadersâ office to get this right.â
Two days later, Wright writes: âI think we should lay out the approach in a brief memo to the PM.â
As the Tory plan began to crumble, it appears Duffy was feeling the pressure.
Duffy writes to the prime ministerâs then-principal secretary, Ray Novak: âRay, I am cooked. I did nothing wrong.â
Duffy believes the PMO strategy has backfired, and that heâll take the fall.
âI swing between team player mode and do anything for pmsh (Prime Minister Stephen Harper) and it is time for me to say phack it,â Duffy writes.
Itâs still unclear if Wright quit or was fired as the PMâs chief of staff.
Novak, who replaced Wright as chief of staff, was looped in on many of the emails. He is currently in Harperâs inner circle for his re-election campaign.
NDP MP Charlie Angus alleged Thursday that the emails show a pattern of âcorruption, collusionâ and âcover-up.â
âAnd it seems that everyone around the prime minister was involved,â Angus said. âWhere was the moral compass here?â
With a report by CTVâs Richard Madan