Stories

The indictment of Mike Duffy

John Robson
June 8, 2015
Senator Mike Duffy may go to jail and he may bring down the Conservative government. He may eventually be judged the single most important cause of the abolition of the Canadian Senate. His name may join “carpetbaggery” and “featherbedding” as a new synonym for gross opportunism and petty corruption. But even if none of that happens, his place in Canadian history is assured, because C2C contributor John Robson has written an epic doggerel poem in the great comedic literary tradition of Robert Service that elevates Mike Duffy to the status of Dan Magrew and Sam McGee. Maybe even higher, because the only thing fictional about Mike is where he lives.
Stories

The indictment of Mike Duffy

John Robson
June 8, 2015
Senator Mike Duffy may go to jail and he may bring down the Conservative government. He may eventually be judged the single most important cause of the abolition of the Canadian Senate. His name may join “carpetbaggery” and “featherbedding” as a new synonym for gross opportunism and petty corruption. But even if none of that happens, his place in Canadian history is assured, because C2C contributor John Robson has written an epic doggerel poem in the great comedic literary tradition of Robert Service that elevates Mike Duffy to the status of Dan Magrew and Sam McGee. Maybe even higher, because the only thing fictional about Mike is where he lives.
Share on Facebook
Share on Twitter

There are strange things done in elections won

By the folks who moil for votes;

The backroom trails have their secret tales

That would make the cops take notes;

Parliament’s bleak lights have seen queer sights,

But the queerest they ever did see

Was that time police said all this must cease

And indicted Mike Duffy. 

 DuffyPEI

Mike’s just a guy who’s from PEI, where the fair spud blooms and blows.

Why he left his home in the East to roam ’round the Hill, God only knows.

He was on the beat, but a Senate seat seemed to hold him like a spell;

Though he’d often say in his homely way that his current job was swell.

 

Then one happy day he was on his way to pursue a trail of clues,

When the call came through. They said Mike it’s you for the Upper House we choose.

If we hold our nose, and our eyes we close, then we cannot smell or see,

What your vouchers say, when you’re on your way, to support our great party.

 

From that very night, ‘cuz he had the right, the expense claims they did flow,

And when Mike was fed, and the hotel bed was cushy soft and low,

Then he signed the chit, and laughed at it: “I’ll cash in this trip, I guess;

And whatever I say, I’m sure that they won’t impose a stringent test.”

 DuffyJournalist

Well, he seemed so sure that they didn’t demur; so he said with a sort of smile:

“It’s pretty bold, but from what I’m told, though I’ve been away a while.

Still it can be said — my face won’t turn red – PEI my home remains;

So you folks should pay, based on what I say, all my little housing claims.”

 

Now a pol’s cash need is a thing to heed, so they swore they would not fail;

And they partied down in old Ottawa town, and swallowed his housing tale.

For he traveled far, as a party star, with his home in PEI;

Earning every plaudit till a Senate audit targeted that lovely guy.

 

And then Nigel Wright just to make it right wrote a cheque for 90 Gs,

Duffy claims he said he was in the red, but don’t give it oh no please;

But they said you must or you bite the dust, so he took it with a tear,

Saying you promised true, and it’s up to you: make my problems disappear.

 

An expense claim made is a debt unpaid, at least once you get found out.

In the days to come, though their lips were numb, they could see the PM pout.

In the long, long night, by the neon light, the reporters, round in a ring,

Endured denial waiting for the trial where Mike Duffy might well sing.

 

And day by day all the flaks could say was the PM did not know;

And on it went, though the spin was spent and the talking points ran low;

Brazeau and Wallin were tossed out, no stallin’, PMO would not give in;

And mud they’d fling at the hateful thing, and it hearkened with a grin.

 DuffyCourt

Till we reached the day when a judge did say, be seated in my court;

It was jammed with press, drooling at the mess, hoping it all would be short.

‘Cuz to sit and sit, hearing lawyers’ wit, would leave brains and buttocks numb;

Until “Here,” they’d say, with intense dismay, “we must sit till Kingdom Come.”

 

Some gum they chewed while the trial they viewed, or the ceiling of the room;

While the lawyers droned, about who was phoned, and who had emailed whom;

The tweets soon soared, though the press was bored — such a show you don’t want to see;

While each Tory soul wished to dig a hole, and then stuff in Mike Duffy.

 

Now the Senate rules were composed by fools who just didn’t want to know;

Though the public scowled, and the press corps howled, for inside a cheery glow,

Lit the cozy seats, where for party feats, the insiders sure got by;

Living here and there, travelling by air, and yet no one asked them why.

 DuffySenate

I do not know how long it will go before we get the facts;

Will we then cry out and all jump about at Mike and his colleagues’ acts?

Or – I truly dread – when it’s all been said, will nobody take the blame?

Will Mike’s goose get cooked, no one else get hooked, in this grisly PR game?

 

Meanwhile there sits Mike, and he doesn’t like being inside the courtroom door;

And he wears a frown you can see ‘cross town, for he surely can’t ignore

That he’s stuck in there, forced to sit and stare, while his whole career gets chilled —

Since he left – oh why? – his home in PEI, it’s the first time he’s been grilled.

 

There are strange things done in elections won

By the folks who moil for votes;

The backroom trails have their secret tales

That would make the cops take notes;

Parliament’s bleak lights have seen queer sights,

But the queerest they ever did see

Was that time police said all this must cease

And indicted Mike Duffy. 

~

John Robson, commentator-at-large with News Talk Radio 580 CFRA in Ottawa, journalist and documentary filmmaker, is also an Invited Professor at the University of Ottawa.

 

Love C2C Journal? Here's how you can help us grow.

More for you

Fanon’s Fanboys: How the Violent Decolonization Movement was Brought to Canada

A second “D” has been added to DEI. But where diversity, equity and inclusion use complaints of oppression and racism to seek power within existing social structures, decolonization seeks to tear down those very structures. It’s the most violent and dangerous threat yet to emerge from the left’s war on Western civilization. It’s showing up where you might expect – in Canada’s Indigenous politics and in the anti-Israel protests following Hamas’s atrocities – and in some places you might not, like grade 9 math classes where students are taught that 2+2=4 is just another subjective Eurocentric construct. Brock Eldon digs into decolonization’s European origin story and explains how it became such a pervasive and dangerous phenomenon in Canada.

Want to Fix Canada’s Screwed-Up Income Tax System? Start By Taxing Families

Equity has lately become the quintessential goal of all government policies. Every Canadian, regardless of position, place or identity, must be seen to be treated fairly by their public institutions. But how can a tax system – surely the most central of all government activities – be considered fair if it requires some families to pay thousands more in taxes than other families with exactly the same income? With Ottawa eagerly adding to the bloat of its ludicrously-complex and costly Income Tax Act, it’s time to confront the glaring inequity at the heart of Canada’s tax system. Peter Shawn Taylor looks back to the last time someone offered a solution to this problem – and finds we need this wisdom now more than ever.

More from this author

Mob Rule on Pipelines and Grizzly Hunting

There was a time in “the true North strong and free” you could follow your dreams as long as you didn’t hurt other people. Then came “social licence” and suddenly, from energy pipelines to the B.C. grizzly bear hunt, things got banned for being unpopular, a.k.a. “socially unacceptable”. That ominous change sets Canada on the well-worn path to the tyranny of the majority, writes John Robson.

Sir John A. Vs. the Vandals Redux

Our self-appointed cultural guardians have once again targeted a statue of Sir John A. Macdonald in Charlottetown. To them, Canada’s first Prime Minister fails to meet today’s pristine moral standards and so must be sent down the memory-hole. John Robson thinks Canadians need the confident humility that comes of knowing flawed people can still be giants.

Mr. Trudeau’s Photo Album

Why is it that those who most vehemently proclaim their own virtue are inevitably those who have some nasty skeletons rattling around in the closet? Take our virtue-signalling PM and his recently unearthed penchant for dressing in blackface, the ne plus ultra of progressive sins. Covering one’s face in black paint isn’t illegal, of course, but it is an affront to contemporary mores. To unpack the distinction between law and morality, John Robson looks at Lord Devlin’s 1965 book, The Enforcement of Morals. Robson makes clear that breaking the law may be one thing, but offending the moral code of the age can extract an even greater price.

Share This Story

Donate

Subscribe to the C2C Weekly
It's Free!

* indicates required
Interests
By providing your email you consent to receive news and updates from C2C Journal. You may unsubscribe at any time.