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Suspended senators to lose pension benefit

From left, Sen. Patrick Brazeau, Sen. Pamela Wallin and Sen. Mike Duffy are seen in this combination of three file photos.
From left, Sen. Patrick Brazeau, Sen. Pamela Wallin and Sen. Mike Duffy are seen in this combination of three file photos. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

OTTAWA – The Harper government has moved to preclude disgraced senators Mike Duffy, Pamela Wallin and Patrick Brazeau from the parliamentary pension plan while they are under suspension from the upper house.

Amendments to the Members of Parliament Retiring Allowances Act are included in a 375-page omnibus budget implementation bill introduced today in the House of Commons.

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The move is aimed at ensuring the trio don’t accrue pensionable service while under suspension for making allegedly fraudulent expense claims.

The three were suspended without pay last November for the duration of the parliamentary sitting, which is expected to continue until 2015 – the same year all three would ordinarily become eligible to collect a generous parliamentary pension.

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The government was embarrassed to discover, after the fact, that the trio’s time in political purgatory would legally count towards the six years of service needed to qualify for a pension.

The change will not apply retroactively to the moment the three were suspended last fall but it will apply to them going forward once the amendments are enacted.

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