As promised in my post A
cabinet that looks like Canada, this week I am
going to take a closer look at the Liberal Government's quite modest
promises as regards to parliamentary reform as listed in their
platform
document. Taking them one at a time they are
(in shortened form):-
“Strengthen the role of parliamentary committee chairs,
including elections by secret ballot. Ensure a more robust system of
oversight and review for legislation.”
This one bothers me a
little given that committee chairs already have considerable power
over the way such meetings are conducted and can, as we have seen in
recent years, use procedural actions to disrupt open discussion
should they wish to. They need to be more open and accountable with
rules established to ensure such partisan or personal biases cannot
substantially effect discussions not more power over the process. I
am not at all sure what “ a more robust system of oversight and
review for legislation” means, reviewing proposed legislation is
after all THE function of committees. Government House Leader Dominic
Leblanc says
House committees should be independent from
government with non-partisan chairs and possibly no parliamentary
secretary members. As with all things the devil is in the details,
this one is a wait and see item.
“Liberal Caucus members will only be required to vote
with the Cabinet on those matters that implement the Liberal
electoral platform or traditional confidence matters.....”
Whilst
more 'free' votes are highly desirable I am not sure that this
actually promises that, in the short term at least most, if not all
legislation could be said to “implement the Liberal electoral
platform”. No MP should be “required to vote” in any particular
manner, naturally those who disagree with their own party’s
legislation and vote against it may face some kind of 'disciplinary'
action from the party but telling an MP how to vote is wrong and
antidemocratic. The ONLY vote that could result in a minority
government falling should be one that specifically says “This house
has no confidence in thus 'whipping' the vote would be
unnecessary.....”
“Create a new, nonpartisan, merit-based, broad, and
diverse process to advise the Prime Minister on Senate appointments.”
We do not know at this point what this “process” will be
however given the restrictions placed upon the PM by the
constitution, and if he truly wants to make the Senate the non
partisan chamber of 'sober second thought' then taking advice, or
even better, candidate recommendations from outside government is the
only alternative. I have said before that given that Senators are
meant to be representative of the province in which they reside that
it seems appropriate that said provinces should be able to propose at
least some of those candidates. Once again this is a wait and see
what the 'process' involves but is far better than proposing reforms
that involve opening up the constitution in a long and potentially
divisive process..
“Work with all parties in
the House of Commons to ensure an inclusive, representative,
transparent, and accountable process to advise on appointments to the
Supreme Court.”
It is my understanding that such a process
was already in place, it is just that the previous PM chose to ignore
such processes.
“Introduce a Prime Minister’s Question Period, empower
the Speaker to challenge and sanction Members during Question
Period.”
The PM is supposed to be one amongst equals,
is having a special question period just for him reinforcing the
perception that he and he alone is responsible for policy? I agree
that the speaker should have more power to enforce members to behave
and to answer actual questions put, not go off on some unrelated time
passing distraction. Good luck with that.
“Change parliamentary financial processes, ensuring
accounting consistency among the Estimates and the Public Accounts,
providing costing analysis for each
government bill and restoring the requirement that the
government’s borrowing plans
receive Parliament’s pre-approval.”
Duh!
“Ensure that all of the Officers of Parliament – the
Chief Electoral Officer, the Access to Information
Commissioner, the Auditor General, the Parliamentary Budget Officer
etc, etc, are all properly funded and respected for doing their
important work to help Canadians.”
We have seen
during the last governments tenure that when you cant get rid of an
officer whos reports you don’t like the next best thing is to cut
their funding. We hope that they all do get sufficient funding
restored to do their job effectively but must ask if there is a way
to ensure that future governments cannot silence these officers by
such methods.
“Not use prorogation to avoid difficult political
circumstances, change the House of Commons Standing Orders to end the
practice of using omnibus bills to reduce scrutiny
prevent future governments from using this method to silence
critical reports.'
Both of these promises are a very good
start and we hope that they can indeed “prevent future governments
(and their own) from using omnibus bills“ although how you 'lock
in' such rules to prevent future governments from changing them back
and what penalties can be put in place to prevent the rules being
ignored is questionable. All the rules around prorogation, forming
coalitions upon the defeat of a minority government, and similar
constitutional matters need to be clarified, particularly if
electoral reform takes place that results in a greater probability of
more minority’s being elected.
The above is almost
identical to the 'list' proposed by Ms May of the Greens as presented
in the post Fixing
What Harper Broke where
she says “Ideally, a parliamentary committee
will be mandated to review the abuses of the last ten years and
recommend a full suite of measures to ensure it never happens again.
“ There is the rub, any incoming government can seemingly come in
and change the rules (or ignore them) as most are not enshrined in
law, but for a few citizens invoking constitutional challenges it
could have been much worse.
As we have seen in recent years the rules around prorogation,
minority and coalition governments and even House proceedings are
easily abused, and how and when such constitutional maneuverings can
take place is far from clear and governed more by 'tradition' than
any hard and fast rules or guidelines. Such things need to be
formally documented to avoid future 'constitutional crises'. With
the House setting its own rules this is not an easy task, we wish the
new Liberal government well with these changes and await the recall
of the House to see exactly how much the 'tone' and substance of the
proceeding will change under what we hope and expect to be a more
open and respectful leadership.
Support Democracy - Recommend this Post at Progressive Bloggers
A blog to give a voice to our concern about the continued erosion of our democratic processes not only within the House of Commons and within our electoral system but also throughout our society. Here you will find articles about the current problems within our parliamentary democracy, about actions both good and bad by our elected representatives, about possible solutions, opinions and debate about the state of democracy in Canada, and about our roles/responsibilities as democratic citizens. We invite your thoughtful and polite comments upon our posts and ask those who wish to post longer articles or share ideas on this subject to submit them for inclusion as a guest post.
Contact us at democracyunderfire@gmail.com
Contact us at democracyunderfire@gmail.com
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4 comments:
For me, Rural, adequate funding of the officers of parliament is crucial. Proper funding ensures their independence.
Exactly, Owen!
Reading your post, Rural, reminds me of the terrible debasement of process that occurred under the Harper regime. As you make clear, much of what the Liberals have promised amounts to a restoration and renewal of what the former government tried to destroy.
Indeed Lorne, the hard part is ensuring that we cannot again fall back into that morass.
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