Harper to meet Senate abolition champ Wall
OTTAWA – Prime Minister Stephen Harper will meet today with Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall to discuss forest fires but he may find himself trying to douse the flames of another disaster: the Senate.
Proximity to Wall, who champions abolition of the scandal-plagued upper house, will doubtless raise questions about Harper’s own plans for the discredited chamber.
The prime minister threw in the towel last year on his three-decade crusade for an elected Senate after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that reforming the chamber would require a constitutional amendment approved by at least seven provinces with 50 per cent of the population (the so-called 7/50 amending formula).
The top court set the bar even higher for abolition, Harper’s fallback position should reform prove impossible. Getting rid of the Senate altogether, the court advised, would require unanimous provincial consent.


