New Democrat MP who pleads guilty in pipeline protest says he has no regrets
VANCOUVER — New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart says he knew he’d face legal punishment when he violated an injunction at a Kinder Morgan work site but he has no regrets about protesting the expansion of the Trans Mountain pipeline.
Stewart says he pleaded guilty to a criminal contempt of court charge in British Columbia Supreme Court on Monday after he was arrested outside Kinder Morgan’s pipeline terminal in Burnaby, B.C., on March 23.
“The police read me the injunction and I understood it and I expected there would be some punishment, some consequences,” he said in a telephone interview after appearing in court. “I wasn’t going to try and wriggle out of them or anything.”
Stewart, who is stepping down as the MP for Burnaby South to run for Vancouver mayor, said he was ordered to pay a fine of $500 by Friday.
