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Poxel SA: Poxel Announces Results from June 23, 2021 Ordinary Annual and Extraordinary General Meeting finanznachrichten.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from finanznachrichten.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
That is the term limit that would have been imposed on senators under the Harper government s original plan to have an elected Senate, which never came to fruition. Thirty other senators named on the advice of Harper are still in the Senate and all but one Alberta Sen. Scott Tannas have now been there more than eight years. Announcing her early retirement Monday, Beyak said she stands by her controversial statements on residential schools, which played a role in her being ousted from the Conservative caucus and suspended from the upper chamber. Some have criticized me for stating that the good, as well as the bad, of residential schools should be recognized. I stand by that statement, she wrote. ....
Lynn Beyak announces retirement from Senate, says she stands by her comments on residential schools theglobeandmail.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from theglobeandmail.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
\Senator Lynn Beyak waits for the throne speech in Dec. 2019. Photo by: The Canadian Press/Chris Wattie OTTAWA Ontario Sen. Lynn Beyak is leaving the upper chamber three years before her mandatory retirement and defiantly standing by her views on residential schools on her way out. Named to the Senate on the advice of Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper in 2013, she says she was committed to serving just eight years. That is the term limit that would have been imposed on senators under the Harper government s original plan to have an elected Senate, which never came to fruition. Thirty other senators named on the advice of Harper are still in the Senate and all but one Alberta Sen. Scott Tannas have now been there more than eight years. ....
Brandon Sun By: The Canadian Press Last Modified: 12:37 PM CST Monday, Jan. 25, 2021 Advertisement Sen. Lynn Beyak waits for the throne speech in the Senate chamber in Ottawa, Thursday, Dec. 5, 2019. Beyak is retiring from the Senate three years early. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Wattie OTTAWA - Ontario Sen. Lynn Beyak is leaving the upper chamber three years before her mandatory retirement and defiantly standing by her views on residential schools on her way out. Named to the Senate on the advice of Conservative prime minister Stephen Harper in 2013, she says she was committed to serving just eight years. That is the term limit that would have been imposed on senators under the Harper government s original plan to have an elected Senate, which never came to fruition. ....