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Conservative senator Patrick Brazeau no stranger to controversy

Published on February 7, 2013
Published on February 7, 2013
Topics :
Congress of Aboriginal Peoples , OTTAWA , Canada , Maniwaki

OTTAWA - A quick sketch of Conservative Sen. Patrick Brazeau, who was removed from caucus Thursday amid reports of an incident of domestic violence at his home:

Age: 38, Canada's youngest sitting senator.

From: Kitigan Zibi, an Algonquin community near Maniwaki, Que. Brazeau is the 15th aboriginal Canadian to be called to the Senate.

Background: Brazeau was elected national chief of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples — a group that represents Metis and other off-reserve aboriginals — in February 2006.

Controversy: He was re-elected by the congress to a four-year term one month before Prime Minister Stephen Harper appointed him to the red chamber in December 2008. He resigned from CAP in January 2009 after news broke that a CAP employee had filed a sexual harassment complaint against him with Ontario's human rights tribunal.

On Wednesday, reports surfaced alleging Brazeau used an address belonging to the father of his ex-wife to claim an income tax exemption.

Claim to Fame: Brazeau lost to Justin Trudeau in a highly publicized charity boxing match in March 2012.

© Canadian Press

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