The comedic utility of the word became apparent, again, in February 2011 in Canada, when a minister of the Crown, Bev Oda, was implicated in a scandal that saw her deny knowledge of the insertion of the word "not" on a legal document denying funding to a respected non-profit organization and offer no explanation as to how her signature appeared on the document.
In 2006, Oda paid back $2,200 to taxpayers after the Liberals found that she had incurred nearly $5,500 in limousine rides at the 2006 Juno Awards in Halifax.
On March 9, 2011, Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons Peter Milliken made two Contempt of Parliament rulings: The first found that a Conservative Party cabinet minister, Bev Oda, could possibly be in contempt of Parliament.
Oda Nobunaga | Oda clan | Oda Hidetaka | Eiichiro Oda | Bev Bevan | Oda Nobuyuki | Oda Nobukane | Bev Vincent | Bev Risman | Bev Oda | Oda | Carl "Bev" Bledsoe | Bev Smith | Bev Francis | Bev Desjarlais | Oda Nobukatsu | Oda Nobuhide | Mikio Oda | Makoto Oda | Bev Shipley | Bev Perdue | Bev Hansen | Bev Cains | "Bev" Bledsoe | Ben Oda |