Rogue page Brigette DePape still protesting Harper
Senate page who interrupted last throne speech with 'Stop Harper' sign still 
rallying against Tories
By Laura Payton, CBC News Posted: Oct 14, 2013 5:31 AM ET Last Updated: Oct 14, 
2013 5:31 AM ET

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/rogue-page-brigette-depape-still-protesting-harper-1.1991075

 
Page Brigette DePape stands in the middle of the floor of the Senate as Gov. 
Gen. David Johnston delivers the speech from the throne on June 3, 2011. She 
was fired soon after, but hasn't given up her opposition to the Harper 
government. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)


























The most memorable moment in the last throne speech came when a young woman 
walked into the centre of the plush red Senate chamber filled with dignitaries 
and elected officials and held up a handmade sign that read "Stop Harper."

Brigette DePape, who had worked as a page in the Senate for a year, was then 
quickly hauled away by the House of Commons' sergeant-at-arms.

"I remember I was terrified," she said, recalling that moment on June 3, 2011, 
in an interview with CBC News from Vancouver last week.

  'We had gone to see a lawyer before and they said [the] worst-case scenario 
would be 30 years in jail for frightening the Queen.'
  - Former page Brigette DePape"[Prime Minister Stephen] Harper is sitting 
right to my left and then there's the Governor General, and then there are all 
the politicians, and I am so afraid. I am afraid about losing my job, I am 
afraid about what my parents are going to say back home in Winnipeg, and I am 
afraid about getting arrested."

On Wednesday, Canadians will see the first throne speech since the one DePape 
tried to interrupt with her protest. CBC News will carry it live at 4:30 p.m. 
ET.

DePape was one of 15 university students every year who suit up in a black 
uniform - with matching bow-tie - and serve as a Senate page, fetching coffee 
and documents at committee meetings and running messages between senators 
during Senate sittings.

Two years ago DePape was finishing up university and unhappy with the result of 
the election one month before. She was nearly finished her year as a page, and 
decided to use the chance to express her opposition to Harper.

DePape says she summoned the courage - many would say gall - by thinking about 
people affected by climate change, residential school experiences and job 
losses, all areas where she says the government is failing to do enough.

"And to think of their strength in the face of the Harper government, to 
continue to wake up another day and to get through it, and to provide for their 
families, those are the people who gave me strength to stand and walk where the 
pages are not supposed to walk [in the middle of the Senate floor], and to hold 
up the "Stop Harper" sign," DePape said.

Consulted lawyer
A page has the rare opportunity to move unimpeded through the halls of 
Parliament, though it's not unusual to run into former pages in the world that 
exists around the Hill. Senate pages can serve for two years while they're in 
university (meaning there are more like eight hired per year), while the House 
takes on another 40 pages for a single year.

DePape's protest was planned in advance, with a friend issuing a news release 
as soon as she was dragged out of the Senate. She was fired before the end of 
her contract, but had feared it would be worse.

"We had gone to see a lawyer before and they said [the] worst case scenario 
would be 30 years in jail for frightening the Queen," she said.

It was a controversial move for anyone who has worked at a legislature or 
Parliament. Clerks, pages, Library of Parliament researchers, tour guides and 
other non-political staff are supposed to function as non-partisan support, 
people on whom MPs and senators can rely to serve fairly.

The Conservatives called DePape a professional protester, while the Liberal 
leader Bob Rae and NDP leader Jack Layton criticized the stunt, saying the 
throne speech, and the Senate floor, weren't the time or place to protest the 
government.

Senate Principal Clerk Blair Armitage, writing in a 2012 edition of the 
Canadian Parliamentary Review, was harsh in his assessment of DePape's protest.

"The role of the staff of a parliamentary administration is to support the 
parliamentarians in doing their work, not to oppose, applaud or champion it. It 
takes an incredible amount of hubris to substitute one's personal opinion on 
any matter for that of the hundreds of parliamentarians chosen to represent the 
country and to subvert that system from within," Armitage wrote.

Raised security concerns
She was also criticized for saying Canada needed its own Arab Spring, at the 
height of violent clashes in North Africa, when Canadians had just had their 
chance to cast ballots in a free election a month earlier.

A news release that day from Senate Speaker Noël Kinsella said DePape's actions 
constituted contempt of Parliament.

"All employees of the Senate are expected to serve the institution in a 
non-partisan manner, with competence, excellence, efficiency and objectivity," 
Kinsella said. "The incident raises serious security concerns which the Senate 
will fully investigate."

A spokeswoman for the Senate wouldn't say whether there had been any changes 
made to the page program or how the throne speech would run on Wednesday, 
though there don't appear to be any new protocols in place.

"The Senate respectfully declines to speak on security-related procedures," 
Annie Joanette said in an email to CBC News.

'Best decision I've ever made'

DePape, 24, giggles easily and leans into her laptop, her long brown hair swept 
to one side, as she answers a reporter's questions via Skype. While her 
precociousness makes her seem younger than her age, she has well-rehearsed 
lines about being inspired by others who agree with her about the result of the 
last election.

She now helps run a website, shd.ca, which stands for a more crude version of 
"Stuff Harper Did." She also speaks at demonstrations, and will be in Calgary 
to protest the Conservative Party at its convention at the end of the month.

"The decision to stand up to Harper was the best decision that I've ever made. 
It was incredibly empowering," DePape said.

Despite her family's initial concerns, they have come to terms with what she 
did.

"First my dad was really critical about the action. And he was also worried. He 
was like, how are you going to pay the rent? But he also sees how Harper is 
taking this country in the wrong direction, like, gutting environmental laws 
and building these spy castles. In the end, he said he was proud of me. But it 
took a while to come to that," she said.

No plans to run for Parliament
Being in demand for rallies and protests against pipelines and against the 
Conservatives puts her in a realm with social movement names like Council of 
Canadians national chair Maude Barlow, national union leaders and 
environmentalist David Suzuki (DePape says most of her protest work is unpaid).

Asked to name her favourite MP, DePape said she's more inspired by social 
movement leaders, and advocates people using civil disobedience to stand up for 
their values. She said she has no plans to run for Parliament in 2015.

DePape said she'll be watching this year's throne speech from a friend's 
apartment in Ottawa, probably with a bowl of popcorn. She hopes it will be a 
turning point.

"Because we know that Harper's going to use the throne speech as a way to 
distract people from a really poor record, like with the Senate scandal that 
has outraged so many people. But that they won't be getting away with it. We 
won't let them get away with it," she said.

"It's really exciting times right now because [Harper is] at his lowest point 
in popularity. Elected with 39 per cent of the popular vote, but right now 
there are only 30 per cent of people who believe him.


"I believe that this particular throne speech could be the one that Harper does 
not recover from, given the recent Senate scandal."












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