CONTENTS
Friday, March 1, 1996
Mr. LeBlanc (Cape Breton Highlands-Canso) 177
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 178
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 180
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 181
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 181
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 183
Mr. Axworthy (Winnipeg South Centre) 183
Mr. Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca) 186
Bill C-3. Motion for introduction and first readingagreed to. 188
Bill C-211. Motions for introduction and firstreading deemed
adopted 188
Bill C-212. Motions for introduction and firstreading deemed
adopted 188
Consideration resumed of motion. 190
167
HOUSE OF COMMONS
Friday, March 1, 1996
The House met at 10 a.m.
_______________
Prayers
_______________
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.) moved:
That, in order to facilitate the conduct of the business of the House in the
Second Session of the Thirty- fifth Parliament, this House order as follows:
That, during the first thirty sitting days of the Second Session of the
Thirty-fifth Parliament, whenever a Minister of the Crown, when proposing a
motion for first reading of a bill states that the said bill is in the same form as a
Government bill was at the time of prorogation of the First Session, and,
whenever any Private Member, when proposing a motion for first reading of a
public bill states that the said bill is in the same form as a private member's
public bill that he or she introduced in the First Session, if the Speaker is
satisfied that the said bill is in the same form as at prorogation, the said bill shall
be deemed to have been considered and approved at all stages completed at the
time of prorogation and shall stand, if necessary, on the Order Paper, or, as the
case may be, referred to committee, at the same stage and under the same
legislative procedural process at which it stood at the time of prorogation;
Provided that any evidence adduced by any committee with regard to any bill
in the First Session of the Thirty-fifth Parliament that is affected by this Order
shall be deemed to have been laid upon the Table, and, as the case may be,
referred to the appropriate committee;
Provided that, if this Order is applied to any bill, the consideration of which
had been completed in the House of Commons, but which was before the Senate
at the time of prorogation, the said bill shall be deemed to have been introduced,
completed at all stages and passed by the House of Commons in the present
session; and
That, for the remainder of the calendar year 1996, Standing Order 81 shall be
amended as follows:
1. Section (4) is suspended and the following substituted therefor:
(4) The Main Estimates for the year ending March 31, 1997 shall stand referred
to standing committees up to and including June 21, 1996. Each such committee
shall consider and shall report, or shall be deemed to have reported the same to the
House not later than the said date, provided that:
(a) not later than the third sitting day prior to June 21, 1996, the Leader of the
Opposition may give notice during the time specified in Standing Order 54 of
a motion to extend consideration of the main estimates of a named
department or agency and the said motion shall be deemed adopted when
called on ``Motions'' on the last sitting day prior to June 21, 1996;
(b) on the sitting day immediately preceding the first allotted day in the
supply period ending December 10, 1996, but, in any case not later than ten
sitting days following the day on which any motion made pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section is adopted, and not later than the ordinary time
of daily adjournment, the said committee shall report, or shall be deemed to
have reported, the main estimates of the said department or agency; and
(c) if the committee shall make a report, the Chairman or a member of the
committee acting for the Chairman may so indicate, on a point of order, prior
to the hours indicated in paragraph (b) of this section, and the House shall
immediately revert to ``Presenting Reports from Committees'' for the
purpose of receiving the said report.
2. Section 14(a) shall be suspended and the following substituted therefor:
(14)(a) Forty-eight hours' written notice shall be given of motions to concur
in interim supply, main estimates, supplementary or final estimates, to restore or
reinstate any item in the estimates. Twenty-four hours' written notice shall be
given of an opposition motion on an allotted day or of a notice to oppose any
item in the estimates, provided that for the consideration of the Main Estimates
for the year ending March 31, 1997, forty-eight hours' notice shall be given of a
notice to oppose any item in the said estimates.
3. Section (17) is amended by inserting, immediately after the word
``ending'', the words ``June 23''.
4. Section (18) is amended by deleting the words ``On the last allotted day in
the period ending June 23'' and by substituting therefor the words ``On the first
allotted day in the period ending December 10'';
He said: Mr. Speaker, this motion is intended to provide a
framework for the effective management of the business of the
House at the beginning of this new session of Parliament.
[Translation]
This motion is intended to provide a framework for the effective
management of the business of the House.
168
[English]
Our standing orders are designed to provide a framework for the
normal operation of the House of Commons on an annual calendar
without regard for the periodic disruptions of that calendar which
may be caused by dissolutions, prorogations or emergency
situations. Whenever that calendar has been interrupted and for
whatever reason, the practice has been for the House to amend its
standing orders or to pass a special order to deal with the situation
in question.
Therefore the government is placing before the House a motion
for a special order to deal with the current situation. We are not
proposing permanent amendments to the standing orders at this
time. Instead we are proceeding in a manner which we view as
being similar to but more constructive than that used in the past to
deal with a situation that has occurred on a number of occasions
previously and will no doubt recur many times in the future.
For that reason there may appear to be similarities between some
of the solutions we are putting forward in this motion and some of
the actions of a previous government in a previous Parliament
which some members on this side of the House as well as others
criticized at the time. I submit there are fundamental differences
between our proposals now and those put forward in 1991.
On that occasion the government of the day dealt only with
specified government bills at specified stages. There was no
attempt to provide a system that would apply equally to private
members' business as well as government bills and the motion
attempted to reinstate a limited number of government bills only in
one fell swoop. Of course this is not what is being done with this
motion.
(1005 )
If the procedure we are proposing for the special order operates
effectively, the Standing Committee on Procedure and House
Affairs may want to recommend some permanent revisions to the
standing orders along the lines of our proposed special order. Of
course this is for the committee to consider.
The rules governing the business of supply require that the main
estimates, that is the spending proposals of the various departments
and agencies, be tabled and referred to the several standing
committees by March 1 and reported by May 31 in order to be
passed before the summer adjournment. Also, in order to facilitate
government operations in the first three months of the fiscal year,
an interim supply bill is passed in March.
With the opening of the new session, if this motion were not
adopted, under the regular rules in our standing orders governing
the opening of a new session, the standing committees of the House
need not be organized before mid March at the earliest. This means
that if the normal procedure were followed, the time available to
study the main estimates could quite properly be truncated, be cut
by 20 per cent or more. In addition the normal rules, if this motion
were not adopted, would require the tabling of the main estimates
before the budget.
The budget when presented could alter the fiscal needs of the
government as initially reflected in the estimates. Therefore this
would make the estimates a less reliable instrument for
Parliament's scrutiny of government expenditure.
It is therefore proposed in this motion that for the year 1996
only, the supply cycle be altered to remove the referral deadline of
March 1 and the report deadline of May 31 and to provide a new
report deadline of June 21, the day the House adjourns for the
summer.
The House will be asked to give final approval to the main
estimates in September or October rather than in June. This will
replace the three weeks of what I might call dead committee time in
March with three weeks of live committee time in June. In other
words, the full period of time that would have been available to
standing committees to study estimates would be restored to them
through this motion. In order to facilitate this, in March the House
will be asked for seven months rather than three months interim
supply.
Members will recognize that the government could well have
ignored this situation. We could have presented the main estimates
sometime this week before the budget and met the March 1
deadline for their referral to the standing committees. Under the
rules, even though these committees would not have been able to
meet before the middle of March, they still would have been
compelled to report the estimates to the House by May 31.
The government does not view that as a desirable course at all.
The work of standing committees on the expenditure process is an
important element in our approach to the revitalization of
Parliament. Therefore, we are not prepared to take advantage of a
quirk in the rules to deprive members of upward of 20 per cent of
the time normally allotted to this process.
We believe that the proposed temporary supply calendar for
1996 as set out in the motion now before the House will work to the
advantage of members on all sides of the House and to the public at
large.
In a similar vein, we believe that the provision of a procedure for
members to reinstate bills on which progress had been made in the
previous session to the stages which they had reached at the time of
prorogation should be viewed as a progressive and constructive
step.
It is important to note, as I have said on another occasion, an
initiative in this regard was actually taken last autumn by the House
leader of the Reform Party, the hon. member for Lethbridge. At
169
that time he put down a notice of motion calling for private
members' bills to be reinstated after a prorogation.
(1010)
When this motion was chosen as a votable item on the order of
precedence, my colleague, the former parliamentary secretary to
the House leader, the hon. member for Kingston and the Islands,
privately indicated to him the positive interest in his proposal and
our likelihood therefore of offering an amendment to his motion
that would treat all bills the same, government bills as well as
private members' bills. It seemed to make sense. It seemed to be
fair and reasonable. If it was sensible to reinstate private members'
bills to where they had left off at the time of prorogation, it was
equally sensible to do the same thing for government bills.
Unfortunately, on the day the proposal of the Reform House
leader was to be debated, the Reform House leader, the hon.
member for Lethbridge, unexpectedly was not present in the
House. As a result, under the rules his proposal disappeared from
the Order Paper. In effect the government is now picking up the ball
where the hon. member for Lethbridge had dropped it last fall.
The motion we have put before the House does not deal with any
specific bill. It may well be that some members, whether ministers
or private members, have reasons for not reinstituting proceedings
on their bills that were terminated by prorogation. We are therefore
merely providing a procedure to apply equally to ministers and to
private members.
Under this procedure, bills on which valuable parliamentary
time had been expended in the last session may be proceeded with
in the new session without duplication of work and the resulting
waste of both time and taxpayers' money. At the time of
prorogation 15 government bills and 11 private members' bills had
at least been advanced to committee but had not been given royal
assent.
There are ample precedents for the House of Commons deeming
government bills from previous sessions to have been advanced in
new sessions to the stages at which they had expired at prorogation.
This has been done in the interest of not wasting parliamentarians'
time. It has been done in the interest of not wasting the time of
members of the public who otherwise would have to come back to
committees to present their views and briefs all over again. It has
been done in the interest of not wasting taxpayers' money by
repeating exactly the same debate or committee hearings on
exactly the same bill.
What is unprecedented in our motion is that we are proposing to
give private members exactly the same rights as ministers on this
matter. Since taking office in November 1993, this government has
acted to enhance the role of the private member especially with
regard to private members' public bills.
As far as supporters of this government have been concerned,
every vote on a private member's public bill has been a
non-whipped, that is, a free vote. It would not therefore be either
equitable or consistent with its policy on private member's
business for the government to seek authority from the House to
reinstate its legislation without also asking the House to grant the
same authority to private members. Consequently, for the first time
in Canadian parliamentary history, private members' bills will be
eligible in a new session to be reinstated to the point they had
reached in a previous session.
The proposal in this motion will apply only to bills from the last
session in which the House and therefore the public had invested a
significant amount of time, namely those bills on which the House
had at least taken one more decision in addition to permitting first
reading. This would be those bills that had at least been referred to
committee, whether before or after second reading. Bills that had
merely been introduced but not advanced any further in the last
session do not represent any real investment of House time and
may simply be reintroduced in the new session in the ordinary
fashion.
(1015)
The procedure will work as follows. During the first 30 sitting
days of the new session any minister or private member who
introduces a bill precisely the same as a bill in the old session and
which had at least been referred to a committee will have the right
to request that the new bill be reinstated to the stage at which it had
progressed at the time of prorogation.
If the Speaker is satisfied that the bill is precisely in the same
form, it shall be ordered reinstated at that stage. This procedure
does not oblige a minister or a private member to reintroduce a bill.
It merely gives them a new right to do so during a limited period at
the beginning of the session.
For the government's part, it has already decided to reintroduce a
number of bills under this proposed regime. There will be some
bills returned to the committee stage, some resumed at the report
stage and some at third reading stage. At least two will, under this
special procedure, be deemed by the House to have passed all
stages in this session and be sent forthwith to the Senate where they
were at the time of prorogation.
Not every minister has reached a final conclusion on this matter,
but the list will include Bill C-7 regarding controlled drugs and
substances; Bills C-52, C-95 and C-96, reorganizing a number of
departments; Bill C-78 respecting witness protection; Bill C-84
respecting regulations; Bill C-88 respecting internal trade; Bill
C-94 regarding fuel additives; Bill C-98 concerning oceans; Bill
C-100 regarding financial institutions; Bill C-101 respecting
transportation; Bill C-106 respecting the Law Reform
Commission; Bill C-111 respecting employment insurance.
170
This may not be an all inclusive list. Ministers as well as private
members will have 30 sitting days to make their final decisions
on restoration of bills.
I cannot speak with authority on which private members will
reintroduce their measures. At least four of my colleagues on this
side of the House have been in communication with my office,
demanding the action we are proposing. I hope it is not
presumptuous of me to expect members on the other side to be
equally committed to their own legislative proposals.
One initiative actually came from the hon. member for
Lethbridge. I am looking forward to his thoughts, which I hope will
be positive, on our acceptance of what could be argued to have
started with his own proposal.
[Translation]
In closing, I think this is a very good motion and I ask the House
to support it.
[English]
I commend the motion to the House and I ask for its early
approval.
[Translation]
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, it is a great pleasure to rise today to speak to this motion
and especially to present my arguments to someone like you, Mr.
Speaker, who has a great deal of experience as both a lawyer and a
member of this House. Moreover, you lived through that whole
period in 1991 when members of this government were sitting on
opposition benches and singing a very different tune.
I think, Mr. Speaker, that it gave you an opportunity to assess the
opposition's arguments to the government then in office and today I
am sure that they will recognize some of what I will be saying
regarding the first motion tabled by the government in this session.
I can tell you that there is nothing reassuring in this motion for
the opposition, and more particularly for Canadian democracy.
They want us to support the kind of motion presented today as if it
were a routine matter.
(1020)
According to the government House leader, this is a routine
motion intended to provide a framework for effective management,
as though Parliament did not already have a framework. I am going
to show you that Parliament already has a framework, a tradition,
which this government wants to bypass this morning by tabling this
motion.
This is an exceptional case. On February 2, 1996, the
government decided to prorogue Parliament, with full knowledge
of the facts, including the consequences of prorogation. Should this
motion be adopted today, it will mark the end-and I am weighing
my words carefully-of the value, principles and effect of
prorogation in this Parliament.
We should perhaps determine what prorogation means. What is
the effect of prorogation? We as members of the House are used to
this kind of language; we know what it means. Some people,
however, may not know what prorogation means or how it can
impact on Parliament.
Since I do not want to quote myself, I will quote law experts,
people with a great deal of experience in this area who have written
at length on the subject. According to citation 235 in the sixth
edition of Beauchesne:
The effect of a prorogation is at once to suspend all business until Parliament
shall be summoned again. Not only are the sittings of Parliament at an end, but
all proceedings pending at the time are quashed. Every bill must therefore be
renewed after a prorogation, as if it were introduced for the first time.
As an effect of prorogation, it is rather important.
In the fourth edition of his book, on pages 102 and 103 of the
French version, Bourinot is even more explicit:
The legal effect of a prorogation is to conclude a session; by which all bills
and other proceedings of a legislative character-in whatever state they are at
the time, are entirely terminated, and must be commenced anew, in the next
session, precisely as if they had never been begun.
This is important. At page 137 of his 1993 book entitled
The
House of Commons at Work-you know, the reference material
newly elected members are given to acquaint themselves with the
operation of this House-your predecessor, the hon. John A.
Fraser, whom you knew, says:
Proroguing a session does not dissolve Parliament, but it does have a similar
effect-
He is going very far.
-on the business before the House.
He then says:
All current business is abandoned, committees cease their activities, and bills
die.
As you can see, over the years, prorogation has always been
construed this way. I will come back to 1991 later. For the moment,
while Mr. Fraser had decided a certain way in 1991, he took a
slightly different stance in his book, in 1993, and I will tell you why
in a moment.
Over the years, custom and tradition have shaped the meaning of
``prorogation''. We have before us a government that claims to be
respectful of the system and is trying, through this motion, to strip
a parliamentary principle of any real meaning.
This motion is unacceptable in that it disrespectfully
circumvents the established legislative process and raises political
interference to new heights.
With this motion, proroguing a session would not mean anything
any more, except a chance for the government to pay a visit to the
other House, waking up a number of senators who are asleep-that
171
is the bright side-and spend the rest of the day enjoying a big
bash at Rideau Hall, at the taxpayers' expense naturally.
The government is trying to make us swallow a principle that is
trend setting and unacceptable, under our current system.
(1025)
When one reads the motion, one realizes that, deny it as they
may, it says exactly the same thing as the 1991 motion. Of course,
this motion having been moved by the Liberals, it cannot be
identical to the one put forward by the Conservatives. But it is
identical. In fact, it is just worse.
What does the government motion say? It says, in essence:
That-whenever a minister of the Crown, when proposing a motion for first
reading of a bill states that the said bill is in the same form as a government bill
at the time of prorogation of the first session-the said bill-shall stand, if
necessary, on the Order Paper, or, as the case may be, referred to committee, at
the same stage and under the same legislative procedural process at which it
stood at the time of prorogation;
Basically, under this motion, while the government may have
prorogued the session, there is no actual prorogation. ``We can do
as we wish, we are in power. So let us go, we are the government''.
But the Liberals are doing so in a way that they condemned when
they sat on the other side of the House.
If the government wanted to prorogue a session, it had to live
with the consequences of its decision. It did not have to prorogue
the House. Who calls a prorogation? The Prime Minister. He is the
one who decides to prorogue the session or not. He does not have to
do it. Why did he do it, knowing full well what the consequences
would be? If there is a problem, as the government House leader
said earlier in his speech when he stated that this motion seeks to
bring a solution to a current problem, that problem was brought
about by the Liberals. Must they now invoke their own turpitude to
find a solution? I believe the Liberals are responsible for the
situation that currently prevails in this House.
I doubt that the legislative agenda for the first session was too
heavy, since the issues that we discussed here led us to conclude
that the government did not have much to propose. It kept putting
off all the important legislation because Quebec was holding a
referendum. The government did not want to displease anyone;
consequently, it kept putting off the really important bills.
The UI bill was controversial; consequently, the government had
to manoeuvre carefully. It postponed introduction of that bill. The
result is that the government prorogued Parliament when these bills
had not yet been passed. Is that the opposition's fault? Is that the
fault of our democratic system? No, it is the Liberals' fault. Why
did they choose to go that route?
If this government were serious and had a clear legislative
vision, we would not be debating such a motion, because the
government would have passed the bills that it deemed important,
before deciding to prorogue Parliament. The government's way of
doing things makes me wonder.
Could it be that we have in front of us a government that does not
know where it is going? I think we can rightly ask ourselves that
question. Or could it be that we have in front of us a government
that does not care at all about Parliament and would rather run the
show-Mr. Speaker, I apologize for using that expression-like an
autocrat? This is also a question that we can ask ourselves.
Indeed, acting in this fashion and trying to use some procedural
trick that one would expect on the TV show Les Parlementeries,
so as to circumvent a clear and well established principle, can only
be done by a government that rules and manages the country's
business with arbitrary and absolute authority. The government
claims to know what is best, and that is it. It often displays this
attitude, as evidenced by this motion.
I know that, in order to justify such undemocratic behaviour, the
government will refer to a so-called precedent dating back to May
29, 1991. I am getting to it now. The government will try to find
differences between what was done in 1991 and what is being done
now and it will say: ``We are not proceeding in the same way. We
are much more open. It is much more transparent in this case''. We
heard the government House leader earlier.
But let me tell the House: there is no difference. Even if there is,
the motion before us today is worse than the one tabled in 1991.
(1030)
It might be worthwhile reviewing what happened in 1991 for
those who are not aware of the details. The motion tabled by the
government of the time, the Mulroney Government, was to
reinstate six bills that had died on the Order Paper as the result of
prorogation.
The government tabled a motion clearly indicating the bills it
wanted reinstated, the stages they had reached and at what stages
they wanted them to be after the motion was adopted.
I am sure, Mr. Speaker, that you will recall that the Liberals were
up in arms over this move by the Conservatives, accusing them of
having committed just about every sin in the book, at least every
one of the seven deadly sins, and stating that this motion
represented a denial of the legislative process of this House. In that
instance, however, six very specific bills were involved. The ones
they wanted reinstated were listed specifically, whereas this time
anybody can get up and say ``This bill is at the same stage as it was
172
at the end of the session'', and we start up where we left off, as if
nothing has happened.
I am going to refer to some portions of the speeches made by the
Liberals of the time. I am sure, Mr. Speaker, that you will find this
amusing, because it will bring back to you what those Liberals had
to say on an identical motion.
The hon. member for Cape Breton-East Richmond said: ``I
contend that the motion is in principle unacceptable in that it seeks
to circumvent, indeed to subvert, the normal legislative process of
this House. In the past this kind of thing has been done only by
unanimous consent. Now the government is seeking to establish an
ominous precedent by attempting to force this procedure on the
House. This is an offensive and dangerous departure from the
practices of all parliamentary bodies and the Chair is, I believe in
accordance with Beauchesne's citation 123.(1) and Standing Order
1, required to refuse to put the motion because of its unprecedented
violation of the checks and balances written into the rules
governing the normal legislative process.''
That speaker is now a government minister, and I am dying to
hear what he has to say. I hope he will rise and say that what his
government is doing makes no sense, because the procedure is the
same as the one before us today.
Another member who rises frequently in the House, or at least
who rose frequently in the House, the member for Kingston and the
Islands said: ``What is happening today is unprecedented in that the
government is moving a motion under Government Orders for
debate to reinstate bills in this session. I have searched precedents
back to 1938 and did not find one where a motion of this kind was
moved for debate. It was always agreed to by unanimous consent.
Never before has a government moved to suspend the rules in
effect and put bills back into their position at the time of
prorogation of a session''.
His comments become even more significant: ``If royal
prerogative is to meaning anything, the prorogation ended those
bills. They have to be reinstated in the usual course, but they ought
to have been introduced and dealt with as new bills in this session.
That is proper procedure in the absence of unanimous consent''.
Further on, to really impress the Speaker at the conclusion of his
speech he said: ``The government itself exercised its royal
prerogative on May 13 to bring this session to an end on May 12.
The publication has been made of the Governor General's
proclamation declaring the session at an end. He started it again. It
was the government's decision to do it. It cannot have it both ways
and now bring one of these motions to trample on the rights of this
House and in effect prevent us from debating these bills''.
Further on, he said: ``The government wants to impose a new
definition of democracy on Canadians, one of the greatest affronts
to the House in years. It is immoral for the government to introduce
this motion. The government is short-circuiting the legislative
process to consider five bills. This behaviour is reprehensible. The
government knows it. He has not produced a single tittle of
evidence to support this gross breach of our practice, and I suggest
that it is totally inappropriate''.
(1035)
I hope that the hon. member for Kingston and the Islands will
rise in this House to condemn what his government is doing with
this motion. It is exactly the same thing. If it was unacceptable in
1991, it is just as unacceptable in 1996. Are there two systems of
justice, two ways of proceeding, one when you are in the
opposition and one when you are in the government? Is this the
Liberal way of doing things?
Another good member, the hon. member for Halifax, said in
1991: ``The government should be ashamed. We are wondering
today why there was a prorogation''. I am also wondering today.
``The House leader is presenting us this pernicious motion, and I
emphasize the word-it is the hon. member for Halifax, and not I,
who says it-in order to speed up the passage of five bills, in total
disregard for the traditions of the House and the British
parliamentary procedure and in disregard for the Canadian
people''.
I hope that the hon. member for Halifax will rise today to
condemn the actions of her government. I hope she will be here to
say: ``What you are doing makes no sense. I do not want to go back
on what I said; what I thought was unacceptable in 1991 I find
wrong in 1996''. I hope that she will rise to make that point.
The hon. member for Saint-Léonard is another member who was
in the opposition in 1991 and is in the government today. What was
he saying regarding this motion? ``If the government really
intended to examine these bills, it should have done it before the
prorogation of the House and that should have been negotiated.''
You know, things that can be negotiated before proroguing the
House.
Did the government ask us anything to speed up things? No, it
can do anything when in power. It can do anything. That at least is
what I am led to conclude today.
I see an hon. member, and I will come back to him, because he
also made an excellent plea in 1991. Before I do that, I want to
mention another member who is now a senator; he was then the
hon. member for Ottawa-Vanier.
An hon. member: He is sleeping.
Mr. Bellehumeur: I do not know whether or not he is sleeping in
the other House, but he is not here now.
173
After examining and analyzing the effects of prorogation, he
quoted Beauchesne and other legal experts. He came to that
conclusion after careful consideration. I will quote from his speech
because it deserves to be read, even if it is a little long. I think
people have a right to know what today's senator was saying when
he was in opposition.
He said this: ``I now oppose-being presented with this jumble
of legislation, some of which we seriously oppose and some of
which we have agreed to. I cannot understand why this
government, these government bullies now want to impose their
will on the House of Commons through force of numbers''.
He went on to say once again: ``There are good arguments that
the government has no business proceeding as it is doing and that it
is contrary to parliamentary reform and all political decency''. He
concluded by saying: ``I think that is bad management, bad policy
and, in my opinion, unparliamentary''.
The hon. member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell-
Some hon. members: Ah, ah!
An hon. member: Now we are getting to it.
Mr. Bellehumeur: I see that the hon. member for
Glengarry-Prescott-Russell is here. I hope he will rise to
denounce his government for the way it is proceeding. I am going
to tell you what he said in 1991 when he was sitting on our side of
the House. You are smiling, Mr. Speaker, because you can surely
remember it.
The hon. member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell had
carefully reviewed all the consequences of prorogation. He said he
feared the kind of precedents such a motion would create, and what
it would mean if the Speaker accepted the motion put forward by
the Conservative government. He said he was afraid it could
resuscitate any bill. I will even give you a specific quote from this
great law expert. ``Finally, if this precedent is allowed to proceed,
then what is next? I ask the question rhetorically. If one can
resuscitate five bills with this motion, or four bills, what stops one
from resuscitating all legislation from the past?'' He even waxed
poetic. Indeed, what would keep the government from adopting
another motion whereby all bills before the House are deemed to
have reached third reading? ``What stops us from resuscitating a
bill from 1977, saying that that particular bill has now reached third
reading, and we are going to vote on it right now? As a matter of
fact, we could actually pass a motion stating it has completed third
reading debate''.
(1040)
If I interpret his words correctly-because he is so poetical at
times that it is difficult to understand what he meant-had the
government motion been ruled in order by the Speaker in 1991, the
government could have done just about anything thereafter. It
could have taken a bill that died on the Order Paper in 1970,
brought it back and considered that the bill was at third reading.
``Hey, there. We have decided to pass this bill; we have a majority
in this House''. That is what he meant.
He went on to say, and this is really good: ``What we are in fact
doing is amending completely the rules of the House by adopting
this motion, were we to do so, or were this motion to be ruled in
order''. For once, I must say that I agree with him. ``The
implications of ruling this motion in order would be such that I fear
we could render-if a government wanted to, and I am not saying it
does-this House of Commons totally irrelevant and redundant.
Render this House of Commons totally irrelevant and redundant? I
hope this rings a bell. I hope that the hon. member will rise in this
House and condemn his government's first motion, saying:
``Listen, the government made a mistake. We cannot go back on
our word. That is the position we took in 1991''. I do not know if
certain members opposite have Alzheimer's disease, but they seem
to have forgotten what they did in the past. I have many more
quotes.
Mr. Milliken: Great. How interesting.
Mr. Bellehumeur: This is interesting, indeed, especially coming
from the hon. member for Kingston and the Islands, whom I quoted
earlier and who, at the time, had risen to condemn the Conservative
government's motion. I see that he is here and that is listening
carefully to what I have to say. He is nodding that it is the case. He
agrees with me. I hope that he will rise in this House and muster the
courage to condemn his government and say: ``Look, we are
making a mistake''. I hope he does that. I hope he has the decency
to do so, because it is indeed a matter of decency.
In 1991, the Liberals were right-yes, you heard me correctly,
Mr. Speaker-to be infuriated by the process that the Conservative
government was trying to impose in this House. The Liberals were
convinced they were right in 1991, and they showed it very clearly
to the Speaker. They pleaded their case on several occasions and
they voted against the motion. Therefore, if they were right in
1991, how can they now table a motion that is even worse than that
of the Conservatives?
Should this motion be adopted, it would have major
repercussions on the traditions and practices of this House, but also
on the democratic system as a whole, on the values that we
Quebecers hold dear and on the values that you, as Canadians, hold
dear, and on democracy. Such would be the consequences of
adopting the Liberal motion now before us. Let us be clear.
Political parties in this House cannot keep changing established
practices, setting precedents and doing as they please just because
they hold the majority, without jeopardizing democracy. They
cannot always bend the rules. Nor should they try to get too much
mileage out of some precedents. Speakers in this House may, at
times, have made
174
mistakes. They may have given too wide an interpretation of
certain principles. This is not the way to make law and
jurisprudence any better: it only generates anarchy in this House.
(1045)
The motion before us today is totally unacceptable in terms of its
content, form and goal. Let me elaborate on each of these three
points.
By its very content, as I have already said, Motion No. 1, the first
motion tabled by the government in this session, more or less gives
ministers the discretion to rise anytime during the first 30 days of
the second session of the 35th Parliament and say ``Now, this is
such an important a bill that it must be reinstated exactly where it
was in the previous session''. The motion the government would
like to see adopted as the rule for this House confers unwholesome
discretionary powers and is unacceptable.
The same applies to its form. They have not even taken the
trouble to go into any detail. I have just heard the government
leader listing all of the bills that have died on the Order Paper
which it would be important to reinstate this session. They cannot
be so important as to eradicate all precedent in this House.
Some, no doubt, are more important than others. Where does the
government stand with respect to all those bills? What was it up to
before prorogation if all those bills were so vital? I believe that the
government ought to have shown good faith by making a selection,
provided there is any good faith on the other side, but I doubt it. I
was trying to comply with the rule of law which states that good
faith is to be presumed. If so, I guess there are some four or five
bills that are more important and it could have listed them. And
even before that, it could have taken the precaution of seeing they
were passed before prorogation. But, when one does not know
where one is going- We will give the government the benefit of
the doubt, but there are four or five bills that could have been
specified and that was not done.
The most important point is the objective of the motion, and that
is unacceptable. The objective is to block democracy, and to block
our growing opposition to certain of those bills. It is to block the
opposition taxpayers are organizing against those bills. It is to push
through their passage with undue haste. It is to thumb one's nose at
tradition. It is to attempt to manipulate public opinion and,
particularly, to deprive the members of this House of their right to
make decisions on these bills.
We knew that the government, and the Prime Minister in
particular, had lost control. We knew that the Prime Minister had
lost control of his cabinet, that we have evidence of daily. We knew
he had even lost control over his own actions, and today this
government wants us to be sucked into the same loss of control,
because it has lost control over its legislative agenda through its
own fault. No, that will not do. The official opposition refuses to
get on side with the government, refuses to support the
government's intent to have this motion adopted.
If we strip prorogation of its meaning and consequences, we pay
a price. If, despite all, Mr. Speaker, you decide to allow the
government motion and go along with this formula for avoiding the
consequences of proroguing a session, I would like to propose an
amendment to the government's Motion No. 1. I move, seconded
by my colleague for Joliette:
That the motion be amended by adding at the end of the first paragraph, after
the word ``prorogation'', the following:
``except when a Member states on a point of order his of her opposition to the
Bill whose reinstatement is being proposed, in which case first reading of the
said Bill shall be moved and it shall be debated like any other new measure
introduced in the House by the government''.
(1050)
That is the amendment the official opposition proposes.
In closing, I know that common sense, justice and parliamentary
fairness will be reflected in your ruling.
As I said at the start of the debate, if you believe in all good
conscience that, by making a ruling that could, at first glance, go
against the 1991 ruling on a similar motion, be aware that the
Supreme Court of Canada in certain instances has felt the need to
adjust things to the point of rendering inconsistent decisions.
I think you have the power to do so as well, to make adjustments,
to put the pieces of the puzzle back in the right place and to identify
and clarify the customs and traditions of this House. I think you
also have the right and the obligation to do so, because the
government seems to have totally eliminated common sense and
fairness from this House.
The Deputy Speaker: I can tell the member and our colleagues
that the amendment is in order. The hon. member for
Surrey-White Rock-South Langley has the floor.
[English]
Ms. Val Meredith (Surrey-White Rock-South Langley,
Ref.): Mr. Speaker, as a new member I had the expectation that
when I came to the House with a new government things would be
done a little differently from the previous government. It is
interesting for me to see not only in this instance but in many others
that the present Liberal government and the former Conservative
government appear to be the very same thing.
When the members on the government side sat in opposition
they were very much against this type of motion. When my hon.
colleague from Berthier-Montcalm read from the transcripts of
Hansard in 1991 he quoted many of these members who were very
opposed to this type of motion. It is very interesting to see that
with the transfer from opposition to government the Liberals have
175
changed their stripes and are now the same as the Conservative
government before them.
I also find it very interesting that in the last session the
government was debating issues that were almost irrelevant to the
Canadian public. It was debating whether it should add MMT to
gasoline and what the national horse of Canada should be.
If this legislation the government wants to reinstate is so
important, why were we not debating it last fall and last spring?
This is the same government which last spring let important
legislation sit for months and months after passing committee and
second reading.
This is the government that sat on legislation and tried to pass it
in one week before summer recess. If the government felt its
legislation was so important to reinstate it in this session, what was
it doing last time other than sitting on its hands?
The lack of serious legislation last session does not justify
reinstating it in this session.
(1055 )
I would like to know where all the new government legislation
will come from to support the honourable things they will
supposedly be doing under the new speech from the throne. When
are we to get the new legislation to bring in all of these programs,
policies and promises under the new speech from the throne? The
government does not have any idea where it is going or how it will
get there.
The House leader for the government says we will treat Private
Members' Business in the same way; we will be magnanimous and
allow Private Members' Business to come forward and be
reinstated as well.
I am one of the individuals affected by Private Members'
Business. I have Bill C-240 which is supported by hundreds of
thousands of Canadians, along with Bill C-226 from the hon.
member for York South-Weston. Canadians all across the country
support those private members' bills. Let me tell government
members, in case they do not know, those two private members'
bills have been stuck in committee since December 1994. They
have not been dealt with and there has been plenty of opportunity
for the government in committee to deal with those private
members' bills.
To have the hon. House leader tell me he is being gracious in
allowing my private members bill to be dumped into committee for
another two years is certainly no encouragement.
If the government is really serious about doing something for
private members it would separate Private Members' Business
from government legislation, stop controlling private members'
legislation and allow it to go through in the manner it should. When
private members' bills are passed through the House of Commons
at second reading they deserve to be heard equally with any
government bill. I do not think any government should have control
over private members' legislation and bury it to the extent it has.
The government is actually showing contempt for Parliament in
the way it has treated not only my private member's bill but my
colleague's from across the way. These two pieces of legislation
have the support of the Canadian public but the government does
not have the courage to bring those bills to a vote. It is content to
bury them in the committee where it does not have to face the
Canadian public and stand up and either support these bills or vote
against them and to be seen by the Canadian public to be voting
against some very good legislation.
The government tells me and my colleague that it will be
gracious and allow our private members' bills to be buried in
committee for another two years.
I have had two chairmen of the justice committee assure me over
the period of a year and a half that my private member's bill will be
dealt with. I have witnesses who have waiting since December
1994 to appear to speak to this bill. To have the government with
two chairs of the justice committee making that assurance to me, I
will have another chairman of the justice committee making that
assurance.
I would like to know whether it is three times lucky or three
strikes and you are out. I would like to know if my private
member's bill is reinstated whether it will be buried, whether the
government will refuse to have the guts and the fortitude to be
accountable for supporting legislation that will provide safety to
Canadians, that will kept dangerous offenders off the street, that
will keep convicted first degree murderers incarcerated for the
period of time the courts deem appropriate.
I would like to know whether government members have the
courage to show the stripe they wear or whether they will simply be
warmed up Conservatives for another two years. I hope that is not
the case. I hope members on the other side will listen to some of the
comments about how it is just rehashed Conservative government
crap and do things a little differently.
The Speaker: It being 11 a.m. we will now proceed to
Statements by Members.
_____________________________________________
175
STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS
[
English]
Mr. Gar Knutson (Elgin-Norfolk, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
riding of Elgin-Norfolk has a distinctive history. It is the
birthplace of Thomas Edison, of Mitch Hepburn a former premier
of Ontario, and the world renowned economist John Kenneth
Galbraith.
176
The city of St. Thomas in my riding has distinguished itself
once again by producing another Canadian first. On the morning
of January 1, 1996 at one second after midnight, Canada's first
baby was born at St. Thomas-Elgin Hospital. Jessica Lynn Perkins
is the daughter of Charlene Winkworth and Randall Perkins. Her
twin sister Christina was born one minute later. These two girls
join a brother and a sister. Jessica shares her record with a baby
born in the city of Laval, Quebec.
I congratulate Jessica's parents and welcome her and Christina to
a great community.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. René Canuel (Matapédia-Matane, BQ): Mr. Speaker,
while hon. members in the other place were relaxing, or even
sleeping soundly, during the speech from the throne, workers in my
riding of Matapédia-Matane decided to inform this government
that they will always be opposed to unemployment insurance
reform.
They will never let this government force them onto welfare
when it is wasting millions of dollars on a totally obsolete
institution. I want to salute them, and I am very proud of them. I
hope they will keep up their fight for justice. My thoughts are with
them all.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. David Chatters (Athabasca, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, over the
past few months since the environment committee and the finance
committee recommended a two cent increase in the excise tax on
gasoline, Canadians have been signing petitions, writing letters to
their MPs and raising a public outcry over the recommendation.
I am shocked to find yet more Liberal hypocrisy on this issue.
The government whip when in opposition stated in Hansard:
``Every budget since this government came to power in 1984-has
increased the excise tax on gasoline. This tax alone, with this latest
increase, will add $600 million to the burden my constituents pay''.
I am delighted to see his concern. I challenge him and all other
Liberal members to demonstrate some backbone and to represent
their constituents for a change and to present the petitions they
have received opposing the gas tax increase.
* * *
Ms. Judy Bethel (Edmonton East, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
providing a retirement income support system for Canadians is one
of the greatest achievements of our Liberal government. Canadians
across this country value the CPP and are counting on it for their
future. In Alberta a recent poll indicates that 57 per cent of
Albertans believe that the CPP is an important part of their
retirement income, yet many I have spoken with are worried that
the rising cost of CPP is placing their pensions at risk.
We heard our Prime Minister commit this government to
working with the provinces to preserve the fabric of our social
programs, those very same programs that we as Canadians value as
our social responsibility one to another no matter where we live in
this country.
The CPP belongs to Canadians and they deserve to have a say in
its future. That is why our government will be consulting with
Canadians in their own communities this spring about how we can
sustain the CPP.
You may be sure, Mr. Speaker, that the collective wisdom of the
residents of Edmonton East will be part of securing CPP for today's
and for future generations of Canadians.
* * *
Ms. Jean Augustine (Etobicoke-Lakeshore, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the need for adequate housing for all Canadians remains a
very serious issue. Canada's housing programs provide a source of
social stability and economic strength for many individuals.
In my riding of Etobicoke-Lakeshore and indeed in urban areas
across the country, people understand that the government cannot
do everything. In a rapidly changing world when we are setting up
new forms of federal-provincial partnerships and joint
management, we must continue to explore innovative partnerships
with private and non-governmental organizations in the creation of
housing for those in need.
While being committed to rebuilding Canadian communities
through job creation and renewed economic growth, we must look
at creative and cost effective ways in which there can be the
provision of housing for all Canadians.
* * *
(1105 )
Mr. Larry McCormick (Hastings-Frontenac-Lennox and
Addington, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am proud to rise in the House
today to congratulate a prominent newspaper in my riding of
Hastings-Frontenac-Lennox and Addington.
The Napanee Beaver is celebrating 125 years of publishing.
Recently I had the pleasure of presenting Mrs. Jean Morrison, the
owner and publisher of the Napanee Beaver, letters of congratula-
177
tions from our Prime Minister and from Canada's Governor
General.
The Napanee Beaver has made a significant contribution to the
lives of its readers. It has kept the people of the Napanee area
informed about the issues that are relevant to our country and our
community. Its cartoons have brought smiles to our faces. It has
played an important role in the commerce of our area by bringing
advertisers and consumers together in its pages. Most important, a
free exchange of news and views is fundamental in a democracy.
My best wishes for continued success to the Napanee Beaver,
125 years young. Colleagues, please join me in congratulating my
local paper and all of the community papers across Canada for the
role they play in the democratic process.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Réjean Lefebvre (Champlain, BQ): Mr. Speaker, in
February, the Department of the Environment and the Department
of Fisheries and Oceans asked for new studies on the
Irving Whale
issue, which could very well challenge the validity of the operation
under which the barge is to be refloated.
According to the most conservative estimates, the government's
dithering may have cost, for last summer's aborted attempt alone,
at least $12.5 million. So far, not one penny has been recovered
from Irving.
Due to the incompetence of some officials and the former
environment minister, the Irving Whale issue has become an
environmental, administrative and financial scandal.
The Bloc Quebecois is hoping that the solution chosen by the
new ministers in charge will be based on unbiased studies and not
on some officials' whims, and that it will take into account the
environment, the economy and the health of the people in the
Magdalen Islands and Prince Edward Island.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Ian McClelland (Edmonton Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, character is the single most important defining element of
a human being. Character is to do the right thing when no one is
looking, to persevere when the going gets tough.
Colleagues, I ask you to join with me in acknowledging Mr. Rich
Winter of Edmonton, a man who exemplifies character, a man who
took on the entire professional hockey establishment to bring to an
end an odious era in Canadian hockey history.
In January 1990, Mr. Winter at great personal expense lodged a
complaint with the RCMP against Alan Eagleson. Over many of
the six years between then and now, Mr. Winter was alone in
pursuing the case, fighting the inertia of the entrenched legal,
media and hockey worlds.
Today Mr. Eagleson is under U.S. indictment and an extradition
request has been made to Canadian justice officials.
Mr. Winter, on behalf of all Canadians, I thank you for your
inspiration. I thank you for being an example to all of us to
relentlessly pursue our causes. And if the cause is right, then by
your example we know that justice will prevail.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Francis G. LeBlanc (Cape Breton Highlands-Canso,
Lib.): Mr. Speaker, on October 30, Quebecers voted to stay in
Canada. Since then, our government has been delivering on the
commitments it made during the referendum campaign. The House
of Commons passed one bill recognizing Quebec's distinct
character and another one giving a veto to the five regions in
Canada.
No later than yesterday, our government reaffirmed its intention
of withdrawing, as soon as possible, from manpower training. The
Canadian federation is evolving and there are more changes to
come.
Our government is confident that its actions will show
Quebecers that Canada is their best choice and that it is through
unity that we can best express the richness of our diversity.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. John Richardson (Perth-Wellington-Waterloo, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, I rise in the House today to salute a proud group of
athletes who recently gathered in Calgary for the Canadian Special
Winter Olympics. Between February 12 and 19 special olympians
participated in these national games with a spirit of sportsmanship
that can serve as an example to all other athletes.
It is my pleasure to congratulate the city of Stratford's floor
hockey team for representing the province of Ontario at these
national games. I applaud the members of this team for their
determination and hard work which allowed them to bring home a
bronze medal from Calgary.
178
(1110)
I would also like to recognize Ingrid Newbery, the Ontario
special olympics co-ordinator for the Stratford community, whose
dedication has allowed many mentally challenged individuals to
realize athletic success on a provincial and national level.
Congratulations to each and every athlete who participated in the
Calgary games.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Mac Harb (Ottawa Centre, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, my
colleagues will certainly be happy to learn that the financial help
awarded by the Business Development Bank of Canada reached a
record level in 1995. The loans granted by the Business
Development Bank of Canada reached a total of almost one billion
dollars and they helped support investments of $1.7 billion in
businesses borrowing from the bank.
The loans awarded by the Business Development Bank of
Canada cost nothing to taxpayers and they lead to the creation of a
great number of jobs. In 1995 alone, businesses borrowing from the
bank employed 188,000 persons across Canada. Here is another
proof that strategies put in place by our government to support
small businesses are effective.
* * *
Mr. Philippe Paré (Louis-Hébert, BQ): Mr. Speaker, last
January 24, we were stunned to learn that Mr. Tran Trieu Quan had
been condemned to life imprisonment by Vietnamese authorities
after a mock trial. How can the foreign affairs minister accept that
this Canadian citizen, clearly the victim of a conspiracy, be held
prisoner in Vietnam without any action on the part of the Canadian
government to get him out of that plight?
We have the right to ask ourselves today if the powerlessness and
inertia of our government can be explained by its decision to put
financial considerations before human rights. Instead of turning a
blind eye to that situation, the foreign affairs minister should prove
that Canadian citizenship still means something abroad by carrying
out his fundamental duty, that is to protect the interests of
Canadians everywhere in the world.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, in the throne speech the government shows a commitment
to defending publicly funded health care in Canada. It recognizes
that we are faced with increasing costs and increasing demands,
but it does not give a single constructive solution on how it is going
to save this program. While the government politically postures
over defending the Canada Health Act, people are dying while on
waiting lists.
We in the Reform Party are committed to ensuring that all
Canadians regardless of their income are going to get their health
care when they medically need it. We have the solutions and we are
willing to share them with the government. I urge the government
to take those suggestions and employ them for all Canadians across
the country who want their medical care when they need it, not
when the government says they need it.
* * *
Mr. Peter Thalheimer (Timmins-Chapleau, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I am pleased to stand today in the House to acknowledge
the tremendous achievements of seven Canadian music artists at
the American Grammy Awards this past Wednesday.
1995 was obviously a good year for Canadian artists. They
accumulated a total of 10 Grammys, making their presence felt in
the music industry. Their success testifies to their incredible talent
which has not gone unnoticed by North Americans.
The big winner is Ottawa rocker Alanis Morissette with four
awards. I am particularly proud of Shania Twain from Timmins
who won best country album. Veteran folk singer Joni Mitchell
took home two Grammys including best pop album. Rob
McConnell took home a jazz Grammy. Charles Dutoit and the
Montreal Symphony claimed a Grammy and Toronto composer
Rob Bowman also left with one.
I join with the House to congratulate all the Canadian winners on
their success at the Grammys. Next week watch Canadian artists
for similar success at the Junos.
The Speaker: As I mentioned yesterday my dear colleague,
perhaps you would send an invitation or acknowledge to our
Canadians that we would like to present them here in the House of
Commons. I make that comment on behalf of all members.
* * *
(1115 )
Mr. Rex Crawford (Kent, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, two of Canada's
big banks just announced the highest quarter profits in their history,
putting them on track to break last year's record earnings.
Meanwhile, automatic teller machines are replacing taxpaying
workers by the thousands and the banks find new ways to pile on
service charges. There were $5.2 billion dollars in profits for the
five big banks last year.
179
I urge the Minister of Finance to continue with the temporary
capital tax of 12 per cent he announced in the 1995 budget which
is slated to expire this October or move to a bank profit tax. Life
insurance companies already pay an additional capital tax, why
not the banks?
I am confident that a majority of Canadians would support this
measure with surging bank profits in tough times.
* * *
Mr. Andy Mitchell (Parry Sound-Muskoka, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I rise today to congratulate the outstanding contributions
of the high school students in my riding of Parry
Sound-Muskoka.
In January I initiated a national unity essay contest at all of the
high schools in my riding. I asked students to provide me with their
ideas about how Canada could achieve long term national unity. I
wanted to encourage our riding's youth to put their thoughts on
paper and to commit themselves to working together with their
peers to promote unity and pride in Canada.
Our students' responses are a tribute to the sincerity and depth of
these young people. I have received many terrific essays and ideas.
Most encouraging of all is the strength of conviction I feel in
these students' writings. They believe in their country. They
believe in a united Canada from coast to coast to coast. They
believe in what we share as Canadians and are committed to
preserving it.
These students are our future and they are prepared to and
capable of accepting the challenge that is Canada.
* * *
Mr. Bob Mills (Red Deer, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, as Reform's
foreign affairs critic one of the responsibilities I have is to keep
track of the MP for Richmond who is the Secretary of State for the
Asia-Pacific. Little did I expect however that in my role I would be
asked by so many of his constituents to chide him for not
representing their views in Ottawa. But since they have asked, why
not?
Recently the MP for Richmond was told in no uncertain terms at
a town hall meeting that he should vote against the Liberal disunity
package but he refused to listen. Instead of representing his
constituents, he intentionally voted against them in this House.
In the Vancouver Sun he was quoted as saying: ``Canada has to
come first. B.C. comes second. And then the opinion of my
constituents-comes third''. This is an elitist political code that
really means: the party comes first, the Prime Minister comes
second and the people come last. Shame on the MP for Richmond.
He should ask Kim Campbell.
179
ORAL QUESTION PERIOD
[
Translation]
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, on Wednesday, the
Vancouver Sun reported the words of
one of the Prime Minister's principal advisers, and I quote:
[English]
``We believe it is possible to act to avert another referendum''.
``Quebecers are coming to realize all the disruption, tension and
instability it will cause''. ``That was the beauty of the issue of
partition''.
[Translation]
Would the Deputy Prime Minister confirm the Prime Minister's
adviser's statement that the government itself fanned the flame and
willingly encouraged the separatist movement through its actions
with the aim of intimidating the people of Quebec?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): No, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, I suspect that the Deputy Prime Minister may well not
have read either the papers or the statements by her colleague, the
Minister of Indian Affairs.
In the light of the remarks by the Prime Minister's adviser, could
the Deputy Prime Minister reassure the House and tell us that the
federal government has no intention of using its powers of
disallowance and reservation against a bill that would permit
Quebec to attain sovereignty?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am surprised by the hon.
member's criticism of our desire to work in partnership. We heard
the premier of Quebec shortly after he was sworn in talk of working
in partnership.
Now, we have an opening offer on the table, and I hope the
federal Leader of the Opposition will listen to the premier of
Quebec.
(1120)
Mr. Gilles Duceppe (Laurier-Sainte-Marie, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, we always have the feeling we are living on another planet
when the Deputy Prime Minister responds to our questions. We did
not criticize the desire to work in partnership. I will send you the
question afterwards. There will be other questions on this very
thing a bit later. You should listen to questions from time to time,
perhaps we would get somewhat coherent answers. I realize this is
asking a lot, Mr. Speaker.
180
I will take it slower. Would the Deputy Prime Minister, the
member for Hamilton East, seated over there, kindly tell us
whether the government has shelved Stéphane Dion's plan B,
among others, and will stop once and for all intimidating the
people of Quebec by dubious means? Is that clear?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, we support the remarks
by the premier of Quebec about his willingness to set the issue of
the referendum aside in order to work on Quebec's economy. We
are following the advice of the premier of Quebec, because we on
this side of the House want economic growth for Montreal, Quebec
City and Canada.
* * *
Mrs. Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral (Laval Centre, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Deputy Prime Minister. The
heritage minister and her government are inviting Canadians to
mark the 30th, 31st and 32nd anniversaries of the flag with
exuberance and enthusiasm, since the ``One in a million'' flag
campaign will last until next year. In the same breath, the heritage
minister is inviting Canadians to celebrate Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Day.
How can the heritage minister invite Canadians to celebrate
Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day, when her own government and those of
several English speaking provinces blithely flout the rights of
francophones recognized in the Constitution and the Official
Languages Act?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am merely following the
advice of the Bloc's designated critic on official languages, who
said that there was nothing wrong with celebrating
Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day elsewhere.
Mrs. Madeleine Dalphond-Guiral (Laval Centre, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, since the Commissioner of Official Languages states that
federal employment centres in Ontario effectively steer
francophones toward courses taught in English, what is the heritage
minister waiting for to denounce unequivocally this measure to
assimilate francophones?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, when I suggested
yesterday in reply to the throne speech that Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Day should be celebrated across the country, it was precisely to
recognize the fact that Saint John the Baptist is the patron saint of
all French-Canadians. It is Quebec's national holiday as well as a
day of celebration for all Canadians who want to understand and
associate themselves with the French fact in our country.
I invite the hon. member across the way to visit Hamilton in my
riding on June 24 and I hope that she will do so, because I can
assure her that, if the French community in my riding is celebrating
Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day this year-as it has done for many
years-it is precisely because we want to share in the pride of being
French-Canadian here in this country.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Bob Mills (Red Deer, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, two days ago in
the House the government promised that before we take on a Haiti
mission it would ``get a better handle on costs'' because they could
easily spiral out of control. Yesterday the Minister of Foreign
Affairs bailed out the United Nations' mission with a blank cheque
signed by the Canadian taxpayers.
(1125 )
The Canadian people would like to know how the government is
going to control costs when there is no information on the mission?
How is the minister going to control these costs, as was promised in
the House, when we do not have a clear mandate or the costs? I
would like the minister to tell us how this is going to be controlled.
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, as often happens, the Reform Party gets it wrong. The real
importance of the decision that we took last night is that Canada
has made a major contribution to secure democracy in Haiti, to
ensure the United Nations is able to provide an effective
international presence to support the people there and to ensure that
once again Canada is able to exercise real leadership.
As I said Wednesday night, and I believe the hon. member was in
the House at that time, it was our initiative that broke the stalemate
and allowed the United Nations security council late last night to
take the decision that would allow us to go into Haiti with a
supplementary force and therefore maintain the evolution toward
democracy.
I want to assure all members of the House that the commitment
we are making is totally and completely within the budget
reference levels of the Department of National Defence. There is
no extra money beyond what we are asking. It is totally within the
peacekeeping budget that the Government of Canada has set aside.
We think that peacekeeping is a priority, unlike the hon. member
opposite.
Mr. Bob Mills (Red Deer, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, Reform members
are also concerned about democracy, the spreading of democracy
and the people in Haiti. We also believe that peacekeeping is a
valuable mission for Canadians and Canadians are behind it.
181
However, there has to be a plan. How can the government know
it is within the budget if it does not have a plan? In 1915 the
Americans went into Haiti to develop democracy. They left 20
years later and the infrastructure was not there. The infrastructure
is not there now and yet we are going to build this infrastructure
in four months and return democracy to this country.
Does the UN or Canada have plans to bring about this miracle of
rebuilding Haiti in a four-month period?
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, as the critic for foreign affairs, the hon. member would be
well advised to actually read what the plan is. The plan was tabled
on February 14 by the Secretary-General where he set out on
several pages the specific mandate for the extension of the United
Nations force. That would enable the Haitian government that has
gone through a very successful democratic election and now taken
office to continue in the development of its own police forces with
the backup and support of the international force to ensure that
there is a proper stabilization during that period of time.
I would be quite glad, at the request of the hon. member, to send
him a copy of the Secretary-General's report to the council. That is
the exact mandate that we are working on and the plan that we
have. That is the kind of arrangement we have made with the UN.
What is most important, because of the our intervention on
behalf of Canadians and on behalf of everybody else, is that we
were able to break a deadlock to ensure that the United Nations was
able to continue its presence.
From the debates last night, I would like to take one comment at
random from the ambassador of the United Kingdom speaking to
the security council. He said: ``We pay the warmest tribute to the
Government of Canada for the lead it has taken in making the
union's continuation possible. It is a source of great satisfaction to
my delegation. The United Nations will now be able to continue its
mission in this stabilization phase''. Due to Canada, Mr. Speaker.
Mr. Bob Mills (Red Deer, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I do have a copy
of that UN document and have read it carefully. Basically we are
going from 6,000 American troops holding the big stick to 2,000
UN-Canadian troops now trying to deliver democracy. We have
done the Americans a big favour because Mr. Clinton promised to
be out of Haiti within or by the end of February.
I would like to ask the foreign affairs minister why he will not go
along with or use this favour in negotiating better conditions for
Canadians and get them to not enforce the Helms-Burton bill as it
relates to the many jobs that Canada may potentially lose?
(1130 )
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I really disagree with the fundamental premise of the hon.
member's question.
We are not doing the Americans a favour. We are contributing to
the United Nations. We are contributing to the democratic
development in Haiti. We are helping a poor country that was under
a dictatorship for many years to regain the opportunity for its
people to choose their own lives, to have economic development.
That is what we are in there for, not to do people favours.
Unlike the Reform critic for foreign affairs, I think that much
more to the point is the comment made in debate on Wednesday
night by his colleague, the member for Swift Current-Maple
Creek, when he said: ``Besides being in our national interest, there
is a certain moral imperative for our continued presence in that
unhappy country to preserve life and to provide humanitarian
assistance''.
That is the real spirit of what we have done. It was expressed by
the member from Swift Current.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Bernard St-Laurent (Manicouagan, BQ): Mr. Speaker,
my question is for the Solicitor General.
In the Liberal government's speech from the throne, only one
short paragraph is devoted to personal security. There is one short
sentence, at the very end of this paragraph, stating that: ``Criminal
procedure will be reformed to better serve victims of crime''. No
concrete measure was put forward regarding the security of
individuals. There is no clear indication of genuine concern on the
part of the government either. In a word, what we have here is
seven or eight lines of lip service.
What positive steps, if any, does the minister intend to take to
better serve the victims of crime?
[English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
I appreciate the question from my hon. friend.
I will point to just two measures which will be very important in
this regard. We are working on legislation to extend the legislation
we passed in the last session regarding the use of DNA evidence.
We are working on measures to have a national DNA data bank to
make it more effective with respect to the use of such evidence.
Together with the Minister of Justice, I intend to proceed with
legislation to give the public more effective protection from high
182
risk violent offenders. I hope I will have the support of my hon.
friend and his party when these measures are presented to the
House.
[Translation]
Mr. Bernard St-Laurent (Manicouagan, BQ): Mr. Speaker, on
the same issue falling under the minister's responsibility, what
possible courses of action is the minister contemplating to resolve
the problem of prison overcrowding without jeopardizing at the
same time the safety of the public?
[English]
Hon. Herb Gray (Leader of the Government in the House of
Commons and Solicitor General of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
again I thank my hon. friend for raising an important point.
The answer to the question will be longer than is permitted in
question period. We are working on measures in consultation with
the provinces and territories which will have as a foundation the
protection of the public, while at the same time focusing on high
risk dangerous offenders and finding alternate means for those who
are not in that category; thus ensuring protection of the public
while saving taxpayers' money.
Again, when we bring forward details, after we have consulted
with the provinces and territories, I hope that we will have strong
support from the hon. member and his party and all members of
this House.
* * *
Mr. Jim Silye (Calgary Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, yesterday
the Prime Minister finally admitted what Reformers have been
saying all along. The government's role in job creation is to create
the atmosphere or environment for the private sector to invest.
This government has failed to deliver. Despite a $6 billion
infrastructure program, 1.4 million Canadians are out of work,
800,000 are part time employees. Despite reducing deficits,
interests costs on the debt are rising faster than the spending cuts
made by the government.
Will the Deputy Prime Minister tell Canadians why her
government continues to support deficit spending, make work
schemes, direct business subsidies and higher taxes?
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the hon. member makes the
point that the government is still struggling to try to create a
climate to foster employment. There is no doubt about that. It is not
a problem that is peculiar to Canada.
However, the hon. gentleman should admit that the government
has come a long way in establishing the fundamentals that are
required for the private sector to get into the business of job
creation.
Interest rates are at very low levels and comparable to those in
the United States. We have inflation at 2 per cent or less.
Unemployment is below 10 per cent.
(1135)
I agree with the hon. gentleman. One way to correct one of the
problems for which I am responsible, which is to take care of the
unemployed, is to create jobs. Surely all of us can agree that the
fundamentals are in place and that the private sector-I believe that
the challenge the Prime Minister put to it is an appropriate
one-are now in a position to get on with the business that business
does best, creating jobs.
Mr. Jim Silye (Calgary Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, this is
getting scary. This is the second person who agrees with
Reformers. I kind of like this.
The government promised to create jobs, not the business
community. The government talks about security and chances for
youth.
My question is for the Deputy Prime Minister. If her government
wants business to perform and create jobs, will she commit to have
the finance minister promise no new taxes, or tax increases of any
kind in the next budget which would be the best inducement for job
creation, as all members know.
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am sure in these last few days
before the budget we are all trying to communicate our respective
messages to the Minister of Finance. Being the kind of person who
listens well, I am sure he will take it all into account.
The hon. gentleman knows that the budget process requires that
whatever is going to be announced in the budget be withheld until
Wednesday afternoon, and we are all looking forward to that.
As a point of clarification, I would like to point out to the hon.
member that during the last election campaign when Liberals
talked about jobs, we recognized then as we recognize now that
what governments at all levels should be doing is creating the
environment and the climate to allow the private sector to create
jobs. We are wrestling with that. It is not an easy task. We
understand the impact of payroll taxes. We understand the impact
of debt financing and the rest of it. But governments at all levels
across the country are trying. Some, I think, are succeeding more
than others. But a sincere attempt is being made to create an
environment that will allow the private sector to create jobs.
Surely the hon. member would recognize that since I stood to
answer the question, it would not be very appropriate for me to
suggest that the government is creating jobs after what took place
at Transport.
183
[Translation]
Mr. Pierre Brien (Témiscamingue, BQ): Mr. Speaker, my
question is for the Minister of Foreign Affairs.
Haitian Canadians who have been trained by the RCMP could
not be integrated into the national police force in Haiti, despite the
commitments made by the Haitian government. Canada has spent
nearly $2 million to train these police officers.
At a time when Canada is striving to help the people of Haiti,
will the minister tell us what he intends to do to ensure that these
police officers can be integrated as planned into the Haitian
national police force?
[English]
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, first I would like to thank the hon. member for
acknowledging the very important contribution we have made in
the training of Haitian nationals as well as Canadians of Haitian
descent in the peacekeeping operation.
At the present time the majority of those who have been trained
have been incorporated into the new Haitian national police. There
are still about 20 or 30 to be integrated. As I understand it, there
was a problem because of the transfer of power between the two
different administrations. Now that we have confirmed the
extension of the international UN activity in Haiti, we will be able
to continue to work with the Haitian government to ensure the
integration of all those who received proper training to help
stabilize the situation in that country.
[Translation]
Mr. Pierre Brien (Témiscamingue, BQ): Mr. Speaker, will the
minister assure us that Canada's contribution will not be
overlooked by the Haitian government, and could he tell us what
benefit he plans to derive from the money invested in the training
of these police officers pending their integration into the Haitian
police force?
[English]
Hon. Lloyd Axworthy (Minister of Foreign Affairs, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, one of the major initiatives of the continuing UN mandate
is to continue the training, both in institutions and on the ground of
the new Haitian police force.
I want to pay tribute to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police who
have provided over 100 officers to Haiti. Chief Superintendent
Pouliot has been the head of that operation since the beginning and
has provided along with the French a continued involvement and
participation.
I will certainly take the member's representation to ensure that
those who have been trained here in Canada will have full access
and opportunity in the Haitian police force.
* * *
(1140 )
Ms. Val Meredith (Surrey-White Rock-South Langley,
Ref.): Mr. Speaker, on May 25, 1992 Canada admitted Lee
Chau-Ping and her family into Canada as investor immigrants.
Unfortunately Lee was not the hardworking businesswoman the
department of immigration thought she was; rather, she is the most
notorious female drug trafficker in the world.
Can the parliamentary secretary of immigration explain how this
woman was able to immigrate to Canada despite the fact she had
been under investigation by the royal Hong Kong police since
1986?
Ms. Maria Minna (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration Lib.): Mr. Speaker, this person
arrived in Canada under the administration of the former
government, which is important because we have changed.
At issue here is the effectiveness of the security checks
conducted when this person made her application for permanent
residence. The Immigration Act gives us the authority to take
removal action against a person if they falsified, lied or
misinterpreted any material fact on their application for permanent
residence.
Bill C-44 also takes away the right of appeal of permanent
residents who have been convicted of serious offences. The
business immigration program is undergoing an extensive review.
These changes will make the program less open to abuse. Bill C-44
will also deal with that issue.
Ms. Val Meredith (Surrey-White Rock-South Langley,
Ref.): Mr. Speaker, recently this issue has come up. It is not an
isolated instance; it is still happening. A Hong Kong crown
prosecutor stated: ``Canadian immigration is very much a laughing
stock of criminals, and Canada is being used by criminals such as
drug traffickers as a soft spot for entry of drugs into North America
and as an exit point for the laundering of funds''.
Is this the type of open for business reputation the government is
trying to promote worldwide?
Ms. Maria Minna (Parliamentary Secretary to Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I understand
the member opposite voted against Bill C-44, a bill which helps.
The government recognizes the safety of the Canadian public is
of paramount importance. However, studies have shown that
184
foreign born individuals represent a significantly lower number in
our prison system compared with Canadian born individuals.
We have in place effective mechanisms, one of which the hon.
member voted against, to identify the small percentage of those
who try to abuse the system. The joint RCMP-immigration task
force will become a permanent partnership. Bill C-44 strengthens
the Immigration Act, not weakens it.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Roger Pomerleau (Anjou-Rivière-des-Prairies, BQ):
Mr. Speaker, my question is for the minister responsible for the
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. In his speech from the
throne, the Governor General described as a conciliatory measure
the federal government's withdrawal from the social housing
sector. This is just nonsense of course, since, in its last budget, the
government had already put a stop to any new initiative regarding
social housing.
Are we to understand that the government is about to propose to
Quebec a partnership in an area that does not come under its
jurisdiction, in which it does not invest any money, but regarding
which it intends to maintain national standards that are ill-suited to
Quebec's needs?
Hon. Diane Marleau (Minister of Public Works and
Government Services, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, we are about to start
working with the provinces to ensure better management in these
areas.
Mr. Roger Pomerleau (Anjou-Rivière-des-Prairies, BQ):
Mr. Speaker, I have a supplementary. Will the minister admit that
this apparent will to decentralize is only a budgetary scheme
designed to offload onto the provinces, with no financial
compensation, the responsibility for 1.2 million Canadian
households desperately in need of social housing units?
Hon. Diane Marleau (Minister of Public Works and
Government Services, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, as we said on many
occasions, the idea is to make good use of the money available. If
we can do that in co-operation with the provinces, we will do so. I
am surprised that the hon. member, who is from Quebec, would be
opposed to what we are doing and will continue to do.
* * *
(1145)
[English]
Mr. Harry Verran (South West Nova, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
fishermen of South West Nova Scotia are frustrated. They feel they
have not been consulted by the Department of Fisheries and
Oceans, and there are many concerns. They are deeply worried
about their future, the future of their families and the future of
their coastal communities.
I ask the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans what he is doing to
resolve the concerns of these fishermen and ensure they will have
an opportunity to be listened to and have a strong voice in the
management of the fishery in the future.
Hon. Fred Mifflin (Minister of Fisheries and Oceans, Lib.):
Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for his question and for the
manner in which he and his colleagues have represented fishermen
and their concerns.
I am aware of these concerns. The emphasis up to now has been
on the occupation of DFO offices. I want to de-emphasize that
because I am aware there are many fishermen who are not
occupying offices, who are interested in speaking, talking and
discussing the issues of concern. They have indicated their
eagerness to do this to me.
To that end and as a result of meeting with members of
Parliament last night I have instructed my officials over this
weekend to contact those people who are occupying the offices to
give them the opportunity to join the discussions that will take
place early next week with those fishermen who share the same
concerns but who are not occupying the offices.
* * *
Mr. Bob Ringma (Nanaimo-Cowichan, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
earlier this week my constituents held victims' rights rallies in
Nanaimo and Duncan, B.C. Last night a rally was held in
Abbotsford, B.C. with over 2,000 people.
The reason for these rallies is that Canadians do not feel safe in
their homes or on the streets. They feel the system has been stacked
in favour of the criminals and they are demanding their rights be
respected for a change.
When will the Minister of Justice start defending the rights of
victims of crime?
Hon. Allan Rock (Minister of Justice and Attorney General
of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the throne speech in its reference to
our continued commitment to ensure the criminal justice system
safeguards the rights of victims is simply additional evidence of the
government's continuing commitment in that regard.
Over the last two years the House of Commons has seen, has
debated and has enacted more constructive changes to the criminal
justice system than in any period in the last 20 years. The
government has shown that commitment.
Mr. Bob Ringma (Nanaimo-Cowichan, Ref.): Mr. Speaker,
the answer, like the throne speech, is more rhetoric without real
commitment. The people of Abbotsford, like the people across
185
Canada, are looking for a specific, a victims' bill of rights. Would
the minister support such a bill?
Hon. Allan Rock (Minister of Justice and Attorney General
of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, this is only the most recent
occasion on which representatives of the party opposite have
sought to cloak themselves in the cause of victims.
The record discloses that when the Canadian people come to
assess which party spoke for victims in the House they will decide
it was the government.
For the first time in the history of the justice system the
government through Bill C-37 introduced victim impact statements
in the Young Offenders Act. What happened? The Reform Party
voted against that bill.
This party with Bill C-41 strengthened enormously the rights of
victims to restitution. What happened? The Reform Party voted
against it. This party for the first time changed section 745 to
provide for the rights of victims to participate in the hearings. What
happened? The Reform Party voted against it.
When victims groups, mothers and fathers of victims, came to
Ottawa, brothers and sisters of those shot to death in crime, arguing
for gun control, what happened? The Reform Party voted against
that bill.
We are the party that stands for victims' rights in this country.
* * *
(1150)
[Translation]
Mr. Maurice Dumas (Argenteuil-Papineau, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Indian Affairs.
Two years ago, the Liberal government pledged to take
immediate action, and I emphasize the word ``immediate'', to
improve the lot of the Innu living in Davis Inlet, notably by
relocating the community in a healthier location.
Can the Minister of Indian Affairs tell us when his government
will make a decision on the relocation of that community, which
continues to live in conditions comparable to that of third world
countries, as witnessed last week by the hon. member for
Saint-Jean?
[English]
Hon. Ron Irwin (Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I thank the member. I thought
the Bloc had forgotten about me.
I consider Davis Inlet one of the success stories of the
government. I went in there, unlike the Bloc. I went to Atlantic
Canada five time. I went to the community once. I met with the
leadership in Ottawa several times. I met with it in Halifax several
times. We provided a package of almost $80 million of federal
funds for that community.
We have done 35 consultative reports with those people. We are
working on their education facilities and we are building houses.
We are not building houses for them; we are working with them.
They are building their own houses and they are getting trained. We
are working in the health facilities.
Unlike what happened under the former government, this was
not only a local story or a provincial story, it was an international
story, which it no longer is, and we did it.
[Translation]
Mr. Maurice Dumas (Argenteuil-Papineau, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, will the Deputy Prime Minister ensure the House that,
from now on, the Minister of Indian affairs will give proper
attention to the urgent issues for which he is responsible, rather
than generate violence with his irresponsible remarks on Quebec?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the minister did a good
job answering questions concerning Davis Inlet, and I hope that the
member opposite will show as much interest regarding aboriginal
issues in his own province.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, my question
is for the justice minister. I am glad to see he has moved to the front
bench, closer to the Reform Party. At least I can see the whites of
his eyes now. Of course, the converse of that is true.
The information I have is that licensing by firearm owners will
not begin until January 1, 1997, a one-year delay. The registration
of long guns will not begin until January 1, 1999, another one-year
delay.
Is this true? Are these two key components of his gun legislation
to be delayed?
Hon. Allan Rock (Minister of Justice and Attorney General
of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, may I first speak to geography. I
assure my hon. colleague that my move was lateral and that the gulf
that separates us remains just as wide.
On the subject of timing, when the firearms legislation was
tabled in February 1995, which now seems like a very long time
ago, our projection was for licensing to begin on January 1, 1996.
Through the very skilful and elaborate means my hon. colleague
used in his vain attempt to impede and defeat the legislation, much
time was taken in the parliamentary process. It was not until
December 1995 that the legislation obtained royal assent.
Naturally the hon. member would want us to take all the time
necessary in order to produce a user friendly, efficient and effective
system of registration and licensing in order to be fair to the
firearm owners of Canada. That is what we intend to do.
186
(1155)
We shall bring the registration and licensing systems on line and
into effect when we can do so, when they are fully ready, when they
are easy and reliable to use for firearms owners, and when we are
certain they will achieve the many worthwhile objectives for which
they are intended.
Mr. Jack Ramsay (Crowfoot, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, when I first
came to the House I used to respect the statesman like manner with
which the justice minister answered questions head on, but he has
learned to dance and juggle like the rest of them over there.
This party and I had nothing whatever to do with determining the
timetable of Bill C-68. The government invoked closure in the
House, set the timetable in the standing committee and invoked
closure on third reading.
If the justice minister claims lives are being lost in the absence
of licensing and registration, if he truly believes this, why the
deliberate delay?
Hon. Allan Rock (Minister of Justice and Attorney General
of Canada, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the licensing and registration
systems are being designed with the help of a users committee
comprised of police officers, police chiefs, farmers, hunters,
aboriginal persons, gun collectors.
We are putting this system together in a way that will work
properly for Canadians. We will take the time required to do that
and get it right.
This legislation was not given royal assent until December of
1995. That is a simple fact. The registration and the licensing
systems will be brought on stream when they are ready and not a
day sooner.
* * *
[
Translation]
Mr. Mauril Bélanger (Ottawa-Vanier, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
have a question for the President of the Treasury Board, whom I
want to congratulate on his recent appointment, incidentally.
As of yesterday, federal public servants are now invited to
submit privatization and commercialization projects. Could the
minister indicate to the House whether the government employees
submitting such projects will be able to do so confidentially and
without fear of reprisals from their managers or from their peers?
Hon. Marcel Massé (President of the Treasury Board and
Minister responsible for Infrastructure, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
first, I want to thank the hon. member for his question, because he
has done an outstanding job in the community of the national
capital region.
Now I want to inform him that the policy made public yesterday
allows employees with initiative to take over many government
services. Those are services they know well, services in which they
have become competent and services that they can better deliver
for the benefit of taxpayers.
In order to make the process fair and equitable, we have
appointed an independent group to review all the proposals to
ensure that contracts are awarded to those best able to serve the
public. Finally, should action be taken against employees, I would
encourage the hon. member to advise the minister concerned right
away so that he can take the necessary corrective action.
* * *
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Deputy Prime Minister.
We gather from the throne speech that the Liberal government
has finally understood that the way to go, for Canada, is the way of
dialogue and, in particular, partnership with Quebec.
Does the Deputy Prime Minister recognize that the only real
partnership, the viable and working partnership between Canada
and Quebec, is a partnership between two peoples?
Hon. Sheila Copps (Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of
Canadian Heritage, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, there are many
partnership opportunities all the time. In the throne speech, we
have shown we are open-minded by our statements on the
restructuring of the federation, on federal expenditures, on areas of
jurisdiction, and on the entrenchment in the Constitution of the
distinct society clause. All we need is the co-operation of our
partner, the premier of Quebec.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Keith Martin (Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, the throne speech states very clearly: ``The government
will announce measures to double the number of federal summer
student jobs this summer''. While I applaud this in principle, what
the students in this country want more than ever is affordable
187
post-secondary education. However, the government has gutted
this program by ripping out over $7 billion in transfer payments.
(1200)
I ask the Deputy Prime Minister: How is this government going
to pay for these summer student jobs, short of mortgaging the
future of this country's students?
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am dismayed that the hon.
gentleman would raise the spectre of gutting post-secondary
education in this country as a result of the actions of the federal
government.
The hon. member knows that the student community, having
heard the news that the Government of Canada is doubling the
amount of money thereby doubling the number of jobs that will be
available next summer, knows this is a very good news story. I
believe it is something that young people across the country were
looking forward to.
To suggest in the same breath that Canada, compared to
practically any other nation in the world, and the Canadian
taxpayers are not shouldering their burden in terms of making a
contribution to post-secondary education in this country is to say
the least very misleading. Canada's educational system at the
post-secondary level in terms of funding is at the top of the list on
any criteria.
Any increase in tuition is very difficult for students and we
recognize that. One of the ways we have attempted to try to allow
young people to cope with that is by confirming early in the game,
in the throne speech and the Prime Minister's speech, that this
summer young people can look forward to twice as many job
opportunities as a direct result of the actions of the Government of
Canada. At the same time we are challenging the private sector and
other governments at all levels to do the same thing.
* * *
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, my question is for the Minister of Human Resources
Development.
In recent town hall meetings discussing the proposed changes to
the UI system there has been a lot of wrong information and
misunderstanding. Could the minister tell this House exactly how
the intensity rule of the proposed employment insurance system
will affect claimants with an existing history of repeat use?
Hon. Douglas Young (Minister of Human Resources
Development, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I understand the hon. member's
deep concern, which is shared by many people across the country,
with respect to the legislation that is going to be brought back
before the House and considered by committee as it relates to the
intensity rule.
Perhaps the safest thing for me to say at this point is that we
recognize in the existing legislation the need to go back and
recognize that people who have been out of the employment
insurance scheme for a few years, who have been unable to find
work and who have had to resort to welfare or whatever, have a
legitimate right to have access to training programs and so forth.
We will recognize past history back three years and will try to find
ways to include them in whatever new process is determined upon.
I would think that all of us are looking forward to next week
when hon. members on both sides of the House from all parties will
again be asked to sit on the committee that will consider the
legislation that is going to reform the employment insurance
situation in this country.
We will together, as a result of the very massive consultation that
has gone on over the past few months, address the question of
continuous weeks of work and the question of the intensity rule. I
have no doubt, having been made aware of the goodwill that exists
in this House and the questions that have been brought forward by
interested parties across the country, that in its wisdom the
committee will find a solution to a very difficult problem.
* * *
Mr. Ken Epp (Elk Island, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, Standing Order
18 clearly states that it is not permitted to reflect on any vote in the
House. In response to a question from our immigration critic, the
parliamentary secretary to the minister of immigration referred
specifically to a vote of that member and the Minister of Justice
reviewed at length the voting which took place in this House with
respect to some of the bills he went through. This violates Standing
Order 18.
I ask you, Mr. Speaker, to scold them and to remind them not to
do it again.
(1205 )
Mr. Don Boudria (Glengarry-Prescott-Russell, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, there is of course a reference in the Standing Orders with
regard to reflection upon a vote in the House. However, the section
in question has more to do with people criticizing others in the
House individually as to whether or not they were absent for a vote.
In terms of how a record of a particular party deals with a vote
has often been referred to on both sides of the House both in
questions and answers. As a matter of fact, virtually every day
people ask why a party voted for or against a particular initiative.
188
The Speaker: I thank both hon. members for bringing this
forward. Yes, I do scold the House.
I would ask you, my colleagues, to please refrain from
mentioning votes like that. We got into that a little bit last fall. We
are just getting back into shape right now and I am sure this is
somewhat of an oversight and that all hon. members will come
right back to the rules as we have been adhering to them since the
beginning.
I do thank both members for their interventions.
_____________________________________________
188
ROUTINE PROCEEDINGS
[
English]
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker,
pursuant to Standing Order 36(8), I have the honour to table in both
official languages the government's response to eight petitions
presented during the first session.
* * *
[
Translation]
Hon. Alfonso Gagliano (Minister of Labour and Deputy
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, concerning the debate on government Motion No. 1, I
give notice that, at the next sitting of the House, I will move that
debate be not further adjourned.
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
have the honour to present the first report of the Standing
Committee on Procedure and House Affairs regarding the
membership of committees. If the House gives its consent, I intend
to move concurrence in the first report later this day.
* * *
[
Translation]
Hon. Alfonso Gagliano (Minister of Labour and Deputy
Leader of the Government in the House of Commons, Lib.)
moved for leave to introduce Bill C-3, an act to amend the Canada
Labour Code (nuclear undertakings) and to make a related
amendment to another act.
(Motion agreed to, bill read the first time and ordered to be
printed.)
* * *
[
English]
Mr. Jake E. Hoeppner (Lisgar-Marquette, Ref.) moved for
leave to introduce Bill C-211, an act to amend the Access to
Information Act.
He said: Mr. Speaker, I am sorry to inform the House that the
member for Calgary Centre is not here to second the bill, but the
hon. member for Swift Current-Maple Creek will.
It is a pleasure to present my private member's bill, an act to
amend the Access to Information Act. This will bring the Canadian
Wheat Board under the jurisdiction of the Access to Information
Act.
Privacy Commissioner John Grace appeared before the Standing
Committee on Justice in 1986. At that time the committee reviewed
the operation of the act and recommended that it be expanded to
include all crown agencies.
The committee felt that the exemptions contained in the law
provided protection from potential competitive harm. The Wheat
Board has no legitimate claims that it would suffer competitive
harm.
Western farmers will support this change of the act very strongly
and I hope that the House will also.
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
(1210 )
Mr. Jake E. Hoeppner (Lisgar-Marquette, Ref.) moved for
leave to introduce Bill C-212, an act to amend the Canadian Wheat
Board Act (audit).
He said: Mr. Speaker, it gives me pleasure to rise in this House
and introduce this private member's bill to amend the Canadian
Wheat Board Act audit.
Currently the auditor general does not have the authority to audit
the Canadian Wheat Board. Over the years the auditor general has
provided a valuable service to Canadians by pointing out waste in
federal government as well as showing where Canadians have
received value for their money.
This change to the act would not only provide for more trust but
would also make the wheat board more accountable and acceptable
to producers.
189
(Motions deemed adopted, bill read the first time and printed.)
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, if
the House gives its consent, I move that the first report of the
Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs, presented
earlier this day, be in concurred in.
The Deputy Speaker: Is there unanimous consent?
Some hon. members: No.
* * *
Mr. David Chatters (Athabasca, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I rise
today in accordance with Standing Order 36 to present the first of a
much larger petition to come from 9,000 constituents across
Canada. They beg this Parliament not to increase the federal excise
tax on gasoline and to strongly consider reallocating some of the $8
billion now collected from gasoline taxes and dedicating it toward
the crumbling national highway system.
Mr. Grant Hill (Macleod, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I have two
petitions today. The first reflects on the parliamentary press gallery
which is excluding a particular newspaper in this area from free
access to the press gallery. This petition would ask Parliament to
address that issue and I agree.
Mr. Grant Hill (Macleod, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, my second
petition relates to section 745 of the Criminal Code. This petition
has been generated by Darlene Boyd. I have a very small petition
here but I will be taking 12,130 names to the office of the justice
minister after I leave the House. I could not carry all the boxes into
the House. It was too big a load.
Mr. Rex Crawford (Kent, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I am happy to
rise pursuant to Standing Order 36 to present a petition on behalf of
the constituents of Kent.
The petitioners draw to the attention of the House the following:
that Canadians are paying approximately 52 per cent of the cost of
a litre of gasoline at the pumps in the form of government taxes;
that the tax increase was 1.5 cents per litre in the last federal
budget; that a committee of Parliament has recommended another
2 cent per litre increase in federal excise tax on gasoline in the next
federal budget; and that over the past 10 years the excise tax on
gasoline has risen by 566 per cent. Therefore, the petitioners
request that Parliament not increase the federal excise tax on
gasoline in the next federal budget.
Mrs. Georgette Sheridan (Saskatoon-Humboldt, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, pursuant to Standing Order 36, I have the pleasure to
present a petition on behalf of 91 signatories from my riding of
Saskatoon-Humboldt and that of my colleague, the hon. member
for Saskatoon-Dundurn, urging this Parliament not to increase the
federal excise tax on gasoline in the next federal budget.
Mr. Morris Bodnar (Saskatoon-Dundurn, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I have a further petition with 100 signators from my
constituency and that of Saskatoon-Humboldt requesting that
Parliament not increase the federal excise tax on gasoline in the
next federal budget.
(1215)
Mr. Gar Knutson (Elgin-Norfolk, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I also
have a petition asking the federal government not to increase the
federal excise tax on gasoline in the next federal budget. It is
signed by 57 constituents in my riding.
Mr. Gar Knutson (Elgin-Norfolk, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I have
a second petition signed by over 300 people.
The petitioners are requesting that Parliament amend the
Criminal Code and all other relevant statutes of Canada to establish
lifetime sentences without eligibility of parole for dangerous
offenders, particularly sex offenders against children.
Mr. Lee Morrison (Swift Current-Maple
Creek-Assiniboia, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, pursuant to Standing
Order 36, I table three petitions identical in form and content from
constituents primarily from the towns of Swift Current, Eastend
and Leader.
My constituents also are begging Parliament not to increase the
excise tax on gasoline in Canada.
* * *
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I ask
that all questions be allowed to stand.
The Deputy Speaker: Is that agreed?
Some hon. members: Agreed.
>
190
190
GOVERNMENT ORDERS
[
English]
The House resumed consideration of the motion.
The Deputy Speaker: I believe the hon. member for
Surrey-White Rock-South Langley has 13 minutes left in her
intervention from before question period.
Mr. Harper (Calgary West): Mr. Speaker, the member would
have liked to finish her remarks but at this moment she cannot be in
the House. She will be returning a bit later.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I was rising to speak. The
representative of the third party has spoken.
The Deputy Speaker: The whip is quite correct. We rotate on
matters. No member from the Liberal Party indicated they wished
to speak. I should have recognized the hon. whip from the
government.
[Translation]
Mr. Don Boudria (Glengarry-Prescott-Russell, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I am happy to take part in today's debate on the motion
put forward by the hon. Government House Leader.
The motion by the hon. Government House Leader is very
innovative. True, it proposes a system that is rather new but not
unprecedented.
First, I must indicate that a little earlier today one of our friends
from the Bloc Quebecois mentioned that in 1991, some
parliamentarians objected, and rightly so according to him, to an
initiative by the last government to reinstate bills that had died on
the Order Paper in a previous session of Parliament.
As we know, several hon. members then rose and accused the
Conservative government of discrimination. The Conservative
government wanted to reinstate only some of its legislation by
means of a single motion and denied the same privilege to other
members of the House.
As you well know, in spite of our grievances those of us who had
protested lost their cause nonetheless on most of the issues raised.
Although we believed our argument to be well-founded, we lost.
The Speaker made a ruling and, naturally, the bills were reinstated
although in a slightly different form than what the government
expected. What are we trying to do today?
(1220)
We want to do something completely different. First of all, the
motion before the House is not discriminatory. It allows all
members of Parliament, ministers, secretaries of state, private
members on the government side as well as those of the opposition
to reintroduce their bills at the stage they where at the end of the
last session.
Personally, I first heard about that innovative idea not from a
government member or a minister, but from the hon. member from
Lethbridge himself.
[English]
The hon. member for Lethbridge moved Motion M-476: ``That,
in the opinion of this House, all private members' bills that have
passed second reading in the first session of the 35th Parliament
and which are presently at committee, report stage or third reading
stage should stand for the second session of the 35th Parliament''.
The hon. member for Lethbridge is an experienced
parliamentarian not only here but in another legislature, a person
who has undoubtedly a lot of knowledge about things
parliamentary. He proposed this motion. Given that the hon.
member for Lethbridge is the House leader for his party, I am sure
he was speaking on behalf of his party. He must have been. After
all, he is the boss of that party, he is the House leader.
The boss of the Reform Party wanted to reinstate all private
members' bills. Hold that thought for a minute. We on our side of
the House, being non-partisan and congenial as we are, had one of
our colleagues, the hon. member for Kingston and the Islands,
approach on our behalf the hon. member for Lethbridge. We told
him it is such a good idea to revive private members' bills from the
opposition. Given that we are non-discriminatory and congenial, as
I said, we said let us apply it to all bills in the House.
Mysteriously on the day the initiative was to have been debated
the hon. member for Lethbridge did not debate the item in question.
I cannot refer to presence or absence. That would be
unparliamentary, but if I could I would. Shall I say he was unable to
debate the issue in question.
An hon. member: It was withdrawn.
Mr. Boudria: How was it that he was not available to debate it
or, as the member across said, deliberately withdraw it?. That is
even worse after having proposed it, given that he was the boss of
his party and speaking on behalf of his party.
I do not understand all of these things, but then again I do not
have a Reform mindset and maybe that is why. I cannot think like a
Reformer and hopefully I never will.
[Translation]
Now, the Reform members' boss wanted to reintroduce private
members bills, those from opposition members as well as those
from government members, even though, traditionally, private
members bills are mainly an instrument used by the opposition to
advocate certain measures. We liked the idea and we wanted to
apply it to bills from opposition as well as government members
using the very formula proposed by the hon. member from
Lethbridge, that is that a bill that was merely introduced in the
191
House would not automatically be reactivated. Likewise, a bill that
was before the Senate would not automatically be reinstated. But
bills that were still before the House and had passed second reading
could be, under this formula.
[English]
Let us remember the other point. This is enabling and it does not
in itself cause the bill to be reactivated. In other words, if I had a
private member's bill, which I do not as the whip, presently before
a committee, if the government had already dealt with the issue and
solved the problem, which the government so often does, and if I
felt my private member's bill was now redundant, it would not be
automatically reinstated. In other words, it simply enables a
member who feels his or her private member's bill is still important
enough to merely cause it to go back to the point it was at prior to
prorogation.
(1225)
This is remarkable because it mirrors what the boss of the
Reform Party, the hon. member for Lethbridge, was asking us to
do.
An hon. member: He is not the boss.
Mr. Boudria: An hon. member across says his House leader is
not his boss. That may be so. I will not tell the Reform Party House
leader that one of his colleagues said the House leader was not his
boss. I will keep it a secret among us. We shall not mention it to the
hon. member for Lethbridge. We would not want to have the hon.
member for Lethbridge all upset at some of his colleagues who
have said in the House today that he is not the boss.
Mr. Epp: We do not believe in top down like you guys.
Mr. Boudria: I wonder if the member for Elk Island does not
think the whip is the boss. Anyway, I will let Reform members
discuss their caucus disagreements. It seems there is a lot of
disagreement if they do not think anyone is running the show.
Let me go back to the motion proposed by the House leader for
the government which I believe to be quite innovative. One of the
important things about this motion is that it saves a lot of money to
the taxpayers of Canada. I suppose if a bill had been terminated at
second reading the economies are somewhat smaller, although they
are there as well because there is sometimes quite a step to reach
that level.
Nevertheless, for a bill or another initiative that has gone to
committee and which has received the input of Canadians from all
across the country testifying either here or elsewhere in Canada, for
the people who have submitted briefs and so on, there are
economies in not repeating the exercise a second time on an
identical piece of legislation.
[Translation]
Groups who have already made representations, who have
already submitted briefs to parliamentarians, would not have to
repeat the whole process a second time for a bill that is identical to
the one that was considered during the previous session.
To protect parliamentarians, the motion states clearly that the
bill has to be identical to the one from the previous session, as
verified by the office of the clerk of the House of Commons,
otherwise this new condition would not be applicable.
You can see the validity and the objectivity of this whole
exercise. I am sure members opposite could find it in their hearts to
support such an initiative.
[English]
This has been the subject of consultation among political parties
in the House. I cannot discuss the details of the consultation
because that is not normally done when consultation is between
House leaders. However, I can say that consultation between the
House leadership teams, leaders, whips and so on, of each political
party has taken place. People were contacted. The substance of
what was there was described to the officials of political parties
across the way. Therefore consultation had taken place previously.
For those who say or pretend this has been brought on at the last
minute, it is not so. It does not reflect reality.
The Hill Times of February 26 had a long story on this. It has
been known for days through that medium, through the
consultation that we had and so on. Consultation has taken place.
Only bills that are identical to those-
(1230)
Mr. Silye: Are you sure?
Mr. Boudria: Oh, yes, I am quite sure. I can even give the exact
time.
Mr. Silye: Were members of all parties present?
Mr. Boudria: Yes. The hon. member from Calgary wants to
verify that we contacted all parties to inform them of this motion.
Indeed we had. I contacted someone from each party personally
and revealed the contents of the motion. I can discuss privately the
name of the MP that I consulted if the people opposite want to
know.
Mr. Bellehumeur: We read about it in the Hill Times.
Mr. Boudria: The hon. member said they read about it in the
Hill Times. Believe me, Mr. Speaker, the consultations between
officials of parties were held long before that.
If the member from Calgary has been led to believe differently,
that is not true. Consultations were held.
192
The first criteria is that only bills that are the same as those
presented in the last Parliament qualify. Only bills that went
beyond second reading qualify.
[Translation]
Moreover only bills from both sides of the House qualify for this
fast tracking system that we have established.
Finally, what we are in fact proposing is an initiative that was
first presented to the House by an opposition member, namely the
boss of the Reform members, the member for Lethbridge.
So, as you can see, Mr. Speaker, our government is open to
initiatives coming from the other side of the House since we are
willing to accept and maybe improve on a suggestion made by
someone on the other side. We are using this initiative that came
originally from an opposition member, after making some
improvements to it.
It is non discriminatory, it applies to everybody and it is not at all
what the Conservative Party proposed. They wanted to reinstate all
at once eight of their bills, I think, only government bills, only the
ones they wanted, etc.
In this motion, it is optional. The motion offers a mechanism for
reinstating bills, which have to be reinstated one by one.
[English]
Let us look at some of the bills that would qualify because they
were not completed in the last session of Parliament. I do not know
which minister, which backbench MP on the government side,
which opposition member will wish to reactivate any of these bills.
These are examples. For instance, there is Bill C-7, the controlled
drug and substances act, an act to repeal the Narcotic Control Act
and parts of the Food and Drugs Act.
It has been the subject of a lot of debate. Why would we want to
repeat all of that? Why not save the taxpayers' money and pick up
where we left off?
Bill C-101, the national transportation agency bill, was
completed at the committee level. A lot of work was done there.
Bill C-94 is an important bill with regard to interprovincial trade.
Also I believe there is a bill with regard to the use of ethanol as a
fuel additive. That is a very important issue. As a rural member
representing an electoral district where ethanol is produced I want
to see that bill proceeded with as soon as possible.
Let us look at some of the private members' bills. The
opposition is telling us: ``Don't proceed with this accelerated
mechanism''. Here is what they do not want us to do.
A Reform MP proposes that we amend the Elections Act with
regard to political parties. Seemingly the Reform Party is going to
vote against accelerating this bill and bringing it to committee.
The member from Mississauga proposed Bill C-337 in the last
session, an act to amend the Food and Drugs Act. That was already
in committee as well. What about the bill regarding intervener
funding proposed by the member for Oxford?
[Translation]
The hon. member for Quebec has also introduced a very
important bill dealing with genital mutilation of female persons,
which is unfortunately practiced, in somes cases, in Canada. This is
an important issue. The debate in this House was completed and the
bill referred to a committee. Why would anyone wish to delay our
work on such bills?
(1235)
[English]
A Reform MP from British Columbia who spoke earlier this
morning against this innovation would be unable, if her party-it
depends when we refer to her party because her boss some months
ago wanted to do precisely this-by its statements today, would
prevent us from proceeding with further consideration of her bill,
an act to amend the Corrections and Conditional Releases Act and
the Criminal Code.
Another member from the Reform Party has a bill regarding an
amendment to the Divorce Act granting access and custody to
grandparents. Why would they not want to proceed with that? Why
would they not want to proceed with the bills that they initiated?
That is all the motion of the government proposes. I have some
difficulty in understanding why the Reform Party does not want us
to go ahead with some of these.
[Translation]
The same thing applies to the members of the Bloc. I know that
they will probably want to go on with the work Parliament has
already started on several issues. I am sure those hon.é members
will want that work to go ahead.
As the House knows, we will proceed. The Minister of Labour
has proposed a motion today to allow us to proceed without further
delay with this motion.
I invite all hon. members of this House to do what the
government House leader and the House leader of the Reform Party
asked us to do some time ago, although it seems the latter has had
time to resonsider his position. Of course, this surprises us.
Nevertheless the initiative proposed by the hon. member for
Lethbridge was an excellent idea and it still is. This is why we
intend, on this side of the House, to adopt this measure. We have
improved it. We invite all members to vote in favor of the proposal
made today in this House by the government House leader.
Mr. Michel Bellehumeur (Berthier-Montcalm, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, it is rather strange to listen to what the member has to say
193
now that he is on the government side. All the same, his approach
is a little better, in the sense that he uses new words.
He talks about innovation, discrimination, savings and backlogs.
It is strange because in the speech he made in 1991-I was reading
it as he was talking-he never spoke of innovation. He never spoke
of discrimination. If discrimination was one of his primary
arguments in 1991, he should have mentioned it then. But no, it is
nowhere to be seen. The clincher he made at the time was that it
went against tradition, that we never had proceeded this way, that it
was unparliamentary. That is what he was saying then.
He raised all sorts of extremely important questions. Now that he
is a member of the government, he no longer raises them. He has
changed his tune. Such an about-face on such a fundamental
question as prorogation is dreadful.
He talked about savings. If the government had negotiated with
the official opposition, there would have been unanimous consent
regarding some bills. We would have agreed to keep some bills on
the Order Paper for consideration during this session. But we
would not have agreed to keep bills like the one on unemployment
insurance. We want a new bill. Canadians are protesting. This bill
does not please them. But the government does not care, it is
washing its hands of the whole mess, and everything is thrown in
together and presented to Canadians. Hey, we are the government,
we are in power.
That is why we are against this motion.
(1240)
It is impossible to proceed this way under the current system.
I conclude with a question that the member for
Glengarry-Prescott-Russell asked the Conservative government
in 1991, in identical circumstances. Perhaps he will say the
circumstances were not the same. The difference is that the motion
was brought in by a Conservative member at that time whereas now
it is being put forward by the Liberals. But, basically, it is exactly
the same thing.
I ask the member to answer the same question he asked the
government in 1991, that is: ``If the motion is accepted in its
present wording-I ask question rhetorically-if one can
resuscitate five bills with this motion, or four bills, what stops one
from resuscitating all legislation from the past?''
If the government can resuscitate all the bills from the previous
session, what will prevent it from going further, if it wishes so, and
reinstating bills which died on the Order Paper in previous
Parliaments? What prevents it from deciding that today is the third
reading for such and such a bill, and that this is so because it holds
a majority of seats? What would stop the government from acting
in that way?
In the end, does the motion they want to us to agree to today in
the House of Commons not simply cancel any effect of
prorogation, of Royal Assent and of the whole tradition of the
House? I
would like to hear what the member has to say on these critical
questions, to see just how far he is willing to go in making a fool of
himself.
Mr. Boudria: Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the questions of the hon.
member for Berthier-Montcalm. First, he asked about the bills.
He says that they would have been willing to reinstate the bills they
like, but not those we like.
This is faulty logic, as you will understand. I assume that, by
extension, the member means that only the bills he introduced
should be allowed to be reinstated.
Mr. Bellehumeur: No.
Mr. Boudria: By extension, that is what it means. Mr. Speaker,
as you said yourself, this does not make sense.
Second, the member reminded me of what I said some time ago,
in 1991, during a previous Parliament, when I sat on the other
side-
Mr. Bellehumeur: In a previous life.
Mr. Boudria: Not in a previous life, but at a time when I am
supposed to have said: ``If one can resuscitate several bills with one
motion, what stops the governement from resuscitating others?''
In fact, this question is rather important, since in itself the
motion we introduced does not reinstate bills. It provides a means
for reinstating bills from both sides of the House at the stages they
were at in the same Parliament.
The difference is, of course, that the other proposal, the previous
government's, applied exclusively to certain government bills, not
to all the bills, not even all the government bills, and further
provided that consideration of the bills would be resumed at the
stage they were at. These are three significant differences.
Third, I would remind you that, in spite of what I said in 1991, I
lost the argument.
[English]
Mr. Jim Silye (Calgary Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, the hon.
member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell made a statement that I
want to clarify and put on the record because it is very serious.
The government House leader did not contact our House leader
or the assistant to our House leader, the member for Lethbridge, on
this issue. We saw it for the first time on the Order Paper. I just
want to let the member know that is why we are quite upset about
the timing.
In addition, the usual custom is that when the House is
prorogued, as a courtesy, the government consults with opposition
194
parties about the deputy speakers. That was not done either. There
are a lot of things this government is just trying to bully through.
The member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell was concerned
and tried to sell the motion that a private member's bill is the same
as a government bill. That is not the case. He wants to know why
we support reinstating private members' bills but not government
bills. They are trying to use the motion of the hon. member for
Lethbridge as a bargaining chip. They are trying to use Private
Members' Business as a trade off, a quid pro quo. We cannot accept
such a deal, especially when all the members opposite when in
opposition so vehemently argued against what the Conservatives
were doing, which is the same thing this government is doing.
(1245)
The hon. member asked what was the difference between Private
Members' Business and reinstating government business and I
would like to answer that and then he can comment after that.
Private members cannot set the agenda. They have no control over
the business of the House. They are at the mercy of the process
which takes a great deal of time and makes it extremely difficult to
see their bills past.
In the last session 165 members' bills were introduced and only
two were past into law. They need a helping hand. On government
business the government controls the legislative agenda. It can
summon bills for debate for whatever reason, whenever and
however it wants. If the government wants to pass a bill it can do
so. There is nothing we can do about it. It can place it on the Order
Paper day after day. It can invoke time allocation or closure. It can
steamroll it through a committee. If a bill has not passed it is
because the government chose not to pass it, and it chose not to
pass a whole bunch of bills in the last session.
Bill C-7 was on the Order Paper for over two years. Rather than
call it for debate the government held take note debates and
adjourned early. Now it wants the opposition to bail it out and
reinstate it.
The government has the control over government bills. Private
members do not have that control. That is the difference. There are
some good private members' bills that were pulled and which
should be reinstated, but those are private members' bills, not
government bills.
What is the purpose of prorogation? The hon. member for
Kingston and the Islands said it best when in opposition. He
pointed out what is happening today is unprecedented in that the
government is moving a motion under Government Orders for
debate to reinstate bills in this session. He searched precedents
back to 1938 and did not find one where a motion of this kind was
moved for debate. It was always agreed to by unanimous consent.
Never before has the government moved to suspend the rules in
effect and put bills back into their position at the time of
prorogation of a session. If royal prerogative is to mean anything,
the prorogation ended those government bills. They have to be
reinstated in the usual course but they ought to have been
introduced and dealt with as new bills in this session. This is the
proper procedure in the absence of unanimous consent.
Now why are these two members, the member for Kingston and
the Islands and the member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell,
both of whom know the standing orders and the rules and so
vehemently opposed what they are now proposing when they are in
opposition, contradicting themselves and why do they not see the
difference between private members' bills and government bills?
Why are they persisting in playing this game instead of getting on
with the business of the new legislation, of the new throne speech
and of the new vision for Canada that this party is supposed to
have?
Mr. Don Boudria (Glengarry-Prescott-Russell, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, I do not know if I would make mincemeat like that out of
the proposal given to us by the hon. member for Lethbridge, the
boss of the hon. member who has just spoken. After all, I thought
the suggestion by the hon. member for Lethbridge was quite
reasonable.
I contacted the hon. member for Mercier and the hon. member
for Lethbridge personally. I could later today rise on a point of
order if the House so desires and indicate the precise date and time,
which I have logged in my office, that the conversations took place.
The hon. member across says it was okay to reactivate the
private members' bills but not the government bills because some
of the private members' bills were good. This is his argument.
Some of the government, I would even say all government bills,
and all private members' bills on this side of the House are good,
not just some of them like the members across the way say.
After all, as the people of Canada's newest province sometimes
say, what is good in Goose Bay is good in Gander.
[Translation]
Mr. Paul Crête (Kamouraska-Rivière-du-Loup, BQ): Mr.
Speaker, the government motion we are debating now is very
special. This week, the government focused largely on the throne
speech, saying that it signalled a new beginning for this
government, which would now adopt a new approach based on jobs
in various sectors.
At the same time, the government presents a motion which will
guarantee business as usual and allow the reinstating of old bills.
The government is acting like those who make resolutions on New
Year's day and break them the day after. We have a hard time
understanding that, especially since it goes against parliamentary
tradition.
195
(1250)
It is a well-known principle, and I feel it is important to mention
this for Canadians who are listening, that prorogation of the House
is a political decision which means we start all over, and that all
bills die on the Order Paper. In this way, we make sure that all new
government positions are different from past ones. For the sake of
efficiency, we can exceptionally reinstate bills, normally those that
have been favourably received in the House.
In this case, the government is upsetting the rules. It is
establishing the principle that anything can be brought back, at any
time, and that, whether there is a throne speech or not, the situation
we had in the previous session can being carried over into the new
one.
I would like to draw the attention of citizens and hon. members
to the fact that, by proposing this motion, by using this approach,
the government is really telling us: ``When we bring back Bill
C-111 on unemployment insurance, it will be business as usual''.
Yet, during the previous session, the government was told in all the
Liberal ridings in the Maritimes, in all the ridings in Eastern
Quebec, that the unemployment insurance reform, as introduced,
was not acceptable.
If the government has the right to reinstate Bill C-111 without
any changes, arguing that it is for the sake of continuity, why did it
prorogue? Why did we decide to put an end to current business?
Was it to let the Governor General have a good party where those
who so desired could go? Was it only for the sake of decorum? It is
rather puzzling.
Moreover, it is the wrong message to send to the people, because
it seems to indicate that we did not listen to them. In my own riding
I had meetings with groups of employees and citizens, sometime
50, 75 or 150, on the question of unemployment insurance.
Whether in Saint-Pascal, Pohénégamook, La Pocatière,
Saint-André de Kamouraska, Rivière-du-Loup or elsewhere,
people told us: ``The government has to go back to the drawing
board''. The motion that the government tabled would allow it to
ignore this message from the people, and this is unacceptable.
I could give you another example: Bill C-96, which establishes
the Department of Human Resources. It has given rise to a major
dispute between Quebec and Canada. This bill would allow the
Government of Canada to interfere in all the areas concerning
manpower training. It flies in the face of the whole debate on
decentralization of manpower training.
Why does the government insist on saying that it wants to bring
back a bill like this one, with a simple majority, and that the
minister, anytime he sees fit in his political strategy, could bring
this bill back? I think that this is contrary to parliamentary rules, to
the very nature of the speech from the throne, and to the obligation
the government has to introduce new policy thrusts.
If the government can come back with bills of a similar nature, it
should have the courage to start the debate all over again and to
steer the legislation through all the stages.
All the more so because, in the case of the unemployment
insurance bill, in December, the government avoided the debate on
second reading and referred the bill to the committee immediately,
under the pretence that there was an urgent need. The government's
strategy is very clear: it wants to try to bring back the bill in
committee without a debate on second reading, because I am sure
that several Liberal members from the Maritimes would have a lot
to say about this bill if it were reinstated in second reading as it
stood last fall.
In fact, the government is trying to avoid taking into account
what its own members want, which is something I find
unacceptable.
It is often said that the opposition opposes measures for the sake
of it, because of the nature of its responsibilities. I would like to
mention two bills that the opposition could have agreed to
reinstate. They are Bill C-66 on grain transportation and Bill C-78
on witness protection, that were dealt with in the last session.
(1255)
Why was there no consultation between the government and the
opposition parties, as is traditional in Parliament, to find a common
ground on bills that could be reinstated? For instance, we certainly
would have been in favour of reinstating the bill to prevent
excision, which was introduced by the hon. member for Quebec.
We are certainly in favour of that and I think we could find that
there is unanimous consent in the House on that subject.
There are the two bills that I just mentioned, Bill C-66 on grain
transportation and Bill C-78 on witness protection. We could have
done the same thing with these two bills and, at the same time, the
government could have brought in the bills that had been received
favourably in the House. It was very clear from the outset that there
was no way we would accept to reinstate a bill such as the one on
unemployment insurance reform, but perhaps some agreements
could have been reached.
I am thinking, in particular, of Bill C-68 on the reform of
electoral boundaries, about which the hon. member for
Bonaventure-Îles-de-la-Madeleine and Bloc Quebecois members
from eastern Quebec ridings were in agreement and made
representations at all stages to be able to protect the five existing
ridings in eastern Quebec. That is a bill that perhaps we would have
been able to agree on, with the consent of the Senate, so that it
could be brought back here and we could deal with it without
ending up where we are now.
196
Unfortunately, there was no such consultation. The government
prefers to hide behind the fact that it would have the advantage
of bringing the bill back at any time, at the minister's request. I
think the government has made a very bad choice.
Now, let us turn to the amendment the Bloc Quebecois has
moved. This amendment would let members respect the privilege
of every other member in this House by giving notice of their
refusal to allow a bill to be reinstated when the minister asks for
leave to introduce his bill. In this way we would be sure that there
would be a minimum of respect for members' responsibilities. It
would be a mark of a very great respect for democracy and it would
conform to the true meaning of prorogation of a session.
The new throne speech having set out a different vision on most
things, it is imperative that members ascertain that the new
legislation reflects this throne speech and that this throne speech is
not only old formulas under a new guise, which very clearly seems
to be the case, given the government motion.
The government should have more courage and say to us: ``Yes,
among bills we have brought forward in the past, there are four or
five that we absolutely want to have passed, so we will bring back
them to this House''. We could even debate the motions. It would
be more democratic than the present approach, whereby the
government to reinstate by the back door bills that had not been
received favourably by the House.
Once more I come back to the unemployment insurance bill. You
know, we listened to what Canadians and Quebecers said last fall,
during the holiday season and in January, and we could take the
opportunity offered by the fact that we have a new Minister of
Human Resources Development to take note of certain things, to
notice that the government measure has one very important
element missing, that is an active policy on employment. The
previous bill singled out seasonal workers, and prevented young
Canadians from being eligible for unemployment insurance in
order to save about $2 billion per year in an unemployment
insurance program funded entirely by employees and employers.
That was what Bill C-111 did.
If the government gets its way and manages to bring back this
bill directly at committee stage, without any debate in the House, it
will be an admission that it has no intention of correcting it. The
government will be admitting that it did not listen to what
Canadians had to say, and that it is still going to try to push all its
cuts through and to continue in the same direction that was
condemned everywhere across the country and even more so in the
Maritimes.
Let me give you another example, Bill C-96. In this case, the
government is really saying: ``Business as usual''.
(1300)
While the federal government is trying for instance to negotiate
an agreement on manpower training with the Quebec government,
although Bill C-96 was denounced in the past as not respecting
areas of jurisdiction, the Minister of Human Resources
Development, in his negotiations with Quebec, would certainly
have a much stronger negotiation tool if he would say: ``Yes, we
realize that our Bill C-96 did not really respect current areas of
jurisdiction and what we want for the future in Canada: that the
federal government be responsible for some things and that it be
made clear; that provincial governments be responsible for other
things and that be made clear, and that in the future we not have
spheres of activity where the two governments get involved and try
to have the biggest poster or the biggest Canada flag on
advertisements''.
When we see statements like the ones made by the Minister of
Human Resources Development, who says that every time the
Government of Canada will be spending money, we must ensure
that there will be a federal government identification to make sure
people will know where the money is coming from, it is very clear
that there is no logic between Bill C-96, the new image that the
federal government wants to project of its willingness to negotiate
in good faith with the governments, and these statements saying
that the federal government will make sure that its investment is
visible everywhere.
There is a major contradiction there and, instead of trying to
sneak bills by us, the government should have the courage to make
a list, to table it and to tell us: ``These bills will come back because
we think they are essential and the House will decide if the
proposition is relevant''.
The present debate is also a major precedent in the evolution of
the parliamentary process. In that regard, I think we would better
go back to the basic principle of British parliamentary government.
Earlier, my hon. colleague quoted excepts from Beauchesne that
clearly show how important the basis for proroguing sessions is,
because this has always been a rather basic decision for a
government to make. This means that the government's intention
when proroguing a session to start a new one is to change its
agenda, change its outlook on things, introduce new bills. This
sends a message to the public about the government's new
approach, as well as that of the opposition, and serve as a basis to
assess the relevance of its actions.
Now, this clarity would be lost. By allowing any bill from the
previous session to be brought back at any time, we are not giving
the people the chance to pass judgement on the government's
actions. I think this will have a major impact in the years to come,
on future Parliaments and on the kind of relationship the people
will have with their representatives.
197
It is complicating matters, providing information that is not as
clear as the information provided in the past. This certainly is not
the way to go to ensure the well-being of Quebecers and
Canadians.
To conclude my presentation on this subject, I would like to say
that the government seems to want to enjoy all the benefits of
prorogation without the drawbacks. They have changed the
wrapping. They have packaged differently what they are trying to
sell, but the product itself has not changed. The same old toys have
been tossed into the box; only the wrapping has changed. And the
person opening this box is expected to shout: ``Oh, this is great, all
new, really different''.
But that is not the message being conveyed, not at all. The
message people are receiving is that old bills, bills that came under
much criticism, that did not go through quickly in the House, that
never made it past consideration in committee because of some
snag, will be given a second life totally artificially.
Under the motion, as moved, any outstanding bill could be
brought back before this House. This seems unacceptable to me,
and definitely not in keeping with what is expected from a
Parliament like the one in which we are sitting.
(1305)
The government must review its actions in several respects. It
must make proposals that are in line with the throne speech. It must
tell us what ``social union'' means and what the impact of its new
policies will be. Above all, its bills must be consistent with that
because, according to what we have heard so far, the Canada social
transfer will be a general fund that the provinces will be free to
manage at they see fit.
The throne speech shows a different approach. It refers to a
guaranteed minimum level of financing for each province. These
elements directly contradict legislation such as Bill C-96. We
would then be debating old bills in accordance with the
government's new approach. The first thing we as opposition must
say is that we should no longer be debating these bills since they
are not in line with the government's proposed policy.
We feel this is unacceptable and hope that the government will
agree to our proposed amendment, which would allow a minister to
bring back any bill, but members of the House would have an
opportunity to explain why they object to it. This would make
Parliament more effective, which is something that people
everywhere are asking us. I hope Parliament will follow our
suggestion.
Mr. Dubé: Mr. Speaker, I had a question, but I will let the hon.
member for-
The Deputy Speaker: Everybody knows that if an hon. member
from a political party objecting to the speech wishes to ask a
question or make a comment, generally, the Chair recognizes that
other party. Does the hon. member wish to put a question?
Mrs. Brushett: Yes, Mr. Speaker.
The Deputy Speaker: The hon. member has the floor.
[English]
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, the hon. member for Kamouraska-Rivière-du-Loup has
made a very interesting point on this motion. He would like to be
selective in what he brings back to the House. This motion does not
have selectivity in the sense that we can bring in one and leave out
the other. It is all inclusive.
The opportunity lies in the motion that every government bill, if
the minister so chooses, and every private members' bill can come
before the House.
I believe we were all elected in 1993, including the member for
Kamouraska-Rivière-du-Loup, to bring forward efficient,
progressive legislation.
I would like the member for elaborate a little further on why he
would consider selectivity of government business in the motion
not to be part of the process of moving forward for a more efficient
government.
[Translation]
Mr. Crête: Mr. Speaker, I thank the hon. member for a question
that will enable me to elaborate on how we see things.
Usually, when Parliament prorogues, all the bills die on the
Order Paper and the government must come up with a new
legislative agenda. That is the very reason for proroguing.
We accept that view, but we propose that only as an exception
should a number of bills, over which the government and the
opposition parties would agree, be maintained. The government
should do some consulting, rather than trying to forcefully bring
back all the bills. Let us look at a list of bills from the last session.
Which ones does the government want to bring back? Which ones
does the official opposition want to bring back? Which ones does
the third party want to bring back? Let us make a list of all the bills
for which there is a consensus.
(1310)
If the government absolutely wants to bring back a piece of
legislation for which there is no consensus, it should come before
the House and say: ``We are asking the House to take this bill back
under consideration''. Then a debate would take place. The UI bill
is an excellent example. If we agreed that Bill C-111 should be
brought back before the House, it would be much more democratic,
much more elegant for the government to table a proposal to the
effect that it wishes that Bill C-111 be maintained, even if this may
involve a few amendments. Then the House would debate the
relevance of such a proposal. In this way, Quebecers and Canadians
198
would see very clearly who, between the government and the
opposition, takes into account the opinions expressed through
consultations, as well as the mood prevailing across the country.
We are not asking that the opposition be the one to decide.
However, there has to be some kind of an agreement on that issue.
Right now, the government is acting like someone who wants to
buy a new car, while also wanting to keep the best things from the
old one. This is not logical. There is no continuity in the
government's action. The government should take into account the
logic in these arguments. It should at least accept the amendment
tabled by the Bloc, or the idea of some agreement or negotiation
between the parties regarding a list of bills from the previous
session. It should not adopt the view that all the bills should be
brought back. That would defeat the purpose of proroguing, while
also significantly reducing the importance of the speech from the
throne. And if the speech from the throne becomes meaningless
because all the bills from the previous session can simply be
brought back, the government itself will have drastically reduced
the impact of its new agenda.
[English]
Mr. Reg Alcock (Winnipeg South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, this is
the kind of debate that I think causes the public to scratch their
heads and wonder a little about what we do here.
I am interested in the remarks of the member for
Kamouraska-Rivière-du-Loup because for the last two years he
and I worked together on the unemployment bill. We travelled
across the country. We heard from hundreds and thousands of
people through the mails, through surveys sent out and through
personal representations on that bill.
We spent hundreds of hours looking at each clause and debating
the provisions of that bill. We spent millions of dollars. If I
understand what he is saying it is that we should be allowed,
because of a technicality, to throw out all that work and start over.
How does he justify passing off all that expense and all that
time?
[Translation]
Mr. Crête: Mr. Speaker, the hon. member is indeed using a very
good example. Let us look, for instance, at the Unemployment
Insurance Act. People asked us to vote against the bill as tabled.
Thousands of people sent postcards to the Leader of the
Opposition. Probably over 20,000, 25,000 or even 30,000 asked us
to vote down the bill. Today's debate is not useless as far as my
fellow citizens are concerned, because they have asked me to do
everything I could to see to it that this bill dies on the Order Paper
and that the government takes its responsibilities and introduces
another bill more in line with the real needs of Quebecers and
Canadians.
This is why I do not have any qualms about turning a debate on
what seems like a procedural issue, which it is not, into a debate on
a substantive issue.
In the speech from the throne, the government said that the
unemployment insurance reform would be based on the same fiscal
parameters which applied before. In other words, it stated that it
would stick to its philosophy on this issue. This is what we heard
from people from all over Canada, people from eastern Quebec and
Atlantic Canada. Talk to the people in the maritimes. I am sure that
the Liberal caucus has talked about this. At least, I hope so, because
if they have not done so, they are not doing their jobs. I am sure that
they are doing a very good job and that they are trying to make the
government take action on this issue. The best way for hon.
members to play a positive role is by debating these issues here in
the House as much as possible.
(1315)
The work of the parliamentary committees is to put the finishing
touch to bills, to try to improve them, by coming up with
amendments that would ensure that we have, in the end, the best
possible bills.
However, we are not yet at that stage with the unemployment
insurance bill; we are not working out the details, we are still
considering substantive matters. As long as we do not have a
reform proposal which includes an active policy on employment, it
would be pointless to approve anything. We will keep doing the
best we can. We will put forward all the amendments needed to
improve the bill, but, in this instance, what Quebecers and
Canadians are asking for is a debate on the substance of the bill. If
we let the government reinstate the bill in its previous form
whenever it feels like it, we are not doing Quebecers and Canadians
any favour.
[English]
Mr. Reg Alcock (Winnipeg South, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, the
point I want to make enlarges upon the question I asked the
member from Rivière-du-Loup. In his response he has admitted
that what he is attempting to do, and assuming he is representing
his party, what his party is attempting to do is to use any device
possible to delay further work on the bill.
If one stops to think about that for a moment, it contravenes one
of the principles upon which the last election was fought. All
parties and all politicians were told very clearly by the public that
they wanted to see a change in how this House conducted itself.
The public wanted to see reforms to the rules of this Chamber.
They wanted to see politicians focusing more on issues than on
technicalities. They wanted to see us focusing on the things that
affected the lives of people and not simply playing the many games
199
that we can play within an arcane set of rules to disrupt the
proceedings of the Chamber.
What has occurred here? The government came into office, laid
a plan before the people and began to enact legislation that
reflected that plan. After two years, which is the normal midpoint
in the life of a government, it wanted to once more put before the
people its plan for the next two years. This is quite common and is
looked forward to. It is an opportunity for the government to reflect
on what it has done and to come forward and state what it has
learned, what it feels has worked and where it wants to go from
here.
However, at any time when we reach that point, because of the
processes that we use and the extensive consultations that we have
undertaken, there are bills that are not complete. They may also not
be unanimous, which is a fact of life in this Chamber, but at some
point we come to a decision. We cannot simply say that because we
had not come to that point on a particular piece of legislation that
we should throw it on the rubbish heap and start over again
particularly in light of the enormous cost. No bill represents that
better than the unemployment insurance bill.
The hon. member opposite who spoke just before me was on
challenged air, that old plane we flew in across the country. He sat
in on the hundreds and hundreds of hours of consultation as people
from every community across the country, including
Rivière-du-Loup, came and spoke to us. Are we simply to say that
all that work was for naught or are we to pick up where we were in
the debate and continue to debate, continue to fight and continue to
ask the government to move?
The member will have to admit that the government has moved a
long way. The bill that is before a committee is very different from
the initial thinking of the government. In fact, it is a bill that
demonstrates very clearly this government's willingness to consult,
to listen and to act on the wishes of people. It is because of the
interventions from the member opposite as well as interventions
from thousands of people across this country that there have been
very significant changes. I would ask the member to remember that
process.
(1320)
The government put a green paper in front of the people of
Canada and asked them to respond to it. The government in that
green paper set out a number of proposals that represented its
thinking about the reforms to UI.
We consulted broadly. The people gave us their responses and
we put recommendations in our report that contradicted what was
said in the green paper because we respected the consultations we
held and we valued the input we received. It went on from there for
further work by the minister. He worked very hard and struggled
very diligently over the summer to work through each one of those
issues and to present even further changes before he introduced the
bill.
The bill he introduced was vastly different from the green paper
because of the hundreds and thousands of hours of work by
Canadians and by members of this House. Now we are in
committee on that bill consulting on the details, looking at some
final reforms. Even now we hear the new minister talking about
further changes, further amendments, further refinements. That is
the process of evolution of a very complicated piece of legislation.
It is a good process and one that has stood us well.
What we should not do and I think people would not accept is to
simply because of a technical game that is played within the House,
throw out all of that work, go back to the drawing board and hold
the unemployed in this country in limbo for another one or two
years. Is that fair to the unemployed? Is that fair to seasonal
workers? Is that fair to employers?
It is time to get on. Yes, I respect the hon. member very much. I
have valued his input on the bill. I think he has a lot to say in the
area of social services and I want to hear him say it. I want him to
debate the bill strenuously and I want to benefit from his input. But
what I do not want is to spend a lot of time on a procedural debate. I
do not want to spend a lot of time arguing how the rules of the
House run so that we can disrupt the order of business, or we can
throw the government off track by what, one day?
We just saw an example of that with the Reform Party. Reform
members refused to allow the tabling of the list of committee
members. What nonsense. What has that accomplished? My gosh,
it has disrupted the agenda of the government for a day. Is this the
kind of message members are going to put in their householder and
run home and say: ``Look what we did. We disrupted the business
of the government for a day. Aren't we heroes''.
That is not what people came here to do. People came here to
debate, to represent their constituencies, to see that the wishes of
Alberta, Manitoba, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Ontario,
Quebec and the maritimes were placed before the House. They
came here to question the government, to ask ministers why they
are doing what they are doing, and to hold them to account. They
came here to vote, to represent their constituents.
That is why we are here. It is not to play silly games, not to spend
our time, our energies, our talent and our creativity looking for
little ways to put a stick into the spokes of government
momentarily. Does that enhance any of us in this House?
If members want to debate the unemployment insurance bill, let
us debate the unemployment insurance bill. If they want to debate
200
Bill C-7, if they want to debate changes to health legislation, let us
debate changes to health legislation. If they want to oppose it,
oppose it. Let us have a vigorous, hard fought debate. Let us hold
the government to account and let us vote. But let us stop the
procedural nonsense. Let us get on with the work of this House.
Let us do what the Reform Party campaigned on, what we
campaigned on, what the Bloc, the Conservatives and the New
Democrats campaigned on. Let us bring some order here. Let us
show people that we are spending their money wisely. Let us show
people that we take the business of this country seriously. Let us get
on with the debates on the issues people want us to debate and stop
the procedural bickering.
(1325 )
Mr. Ian McClelland (Edmonton Southwest, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I listened with some intent and some interest to the
member opposite. He raised some good points about putting up
procedural roadblocks for the sake of procedural roadblocks. We
have not done that as a rule. I agree in that I do not think the
Canadian people want to see this being done. However, the
principle at stake here is whether or not we should simply
acquiesce to whatever the government decides it is going to do and
whether we should in our role as opposition stand up for what we
think is right.
In this case the situation is that since the 35th Parliament started
the government has supported the view that the nomination and
election of vice-chairs for all committees should go to the Bloc,
period. It has not been an open and free election. It has been a set
up job from the very beginning. It is a sham of an election. Our
intent is to bring this to the attention of Canadian citizens
everywhere.
We would have no problem with the Bloc being elected to both
vice-chairs or the vice-chair or the second vice-chair if it were a
free and open election, if it were a secret election within the
committee, but it is not. At every single committee I have attended,
the chief government whip has sat in the committee room, watched,
presided over, pointed fingers and said: ``This is what you are
going to do in this vote''. This is a mockery of democracy.
Our point is not to be obstructive but to point out to the
government and to Canadians that the government cannot be
hypocritical. The Prime Minister cannot when he is in western
Canada go on a radio or television program and say that it makes
him sick when he looks across and sees the official opposition is a
separatist party that will break up the country. Then when he gets
back to Quebec he says exactly the opposite and at every possible
opportunity he mollycoddles and appeases the Bloc and is so afraid
to offend them. We are not afraid to offend them and if that offends
the Liberal government, it should be offended.
Mr. Alcock: Mr. Speaker, I thank the member for his point. I
listened and considered carefully what he said until his last couple
of sentences. If he will permit me I will start there.
The Prime Minister of this country and this government does not
go into western Canada and say one thing then go into eastern
Canada, Quebec or any other place and say something else. That is
a fact. The Prime Minister has not been afraid to take any battle
anywhere in this country at any time in the some 30 years he has
been in this House. I have seen him do it over and over and over
again. I very strenuously reject what the member has suggested.
The fact is there are laws and there are rules and there are ways
of procedure in this House that we respect. The member is simply
not going to gerrymander his way out of that. The fact is whether I
like it or not, the Bloc is the official opposition. We heard a very
lengthy ruling by the Speaker who considered that question very
carefully. That is a fact.
Having established that, let us get on with the business of the
House. The tabling of a list of committee members is a trivial
point. How does preventing the tabling of the list of committee
members by one day further his cause or make him look any more
intelligent or make his debate seem any more fulsome? If he wants
to make the point about vice-chairs, make it. He should stand up in
this House every time. On the many, many occasions he has to
debate substantive issues he should stand up in the House and make
that point. He should stand up in question period and ask those
questions. He should make his case.
I am sure every member knows, particularly every western
member, and I am sure all the members sitting there right now
know the difficulty of finding a life within the travel and the time
we have to spend here. So let us spend the time here to its
maximum value. Let us not waste it.
I do not want to take an extra day away from my family and my
children because somebody has played around with a procedural
motion, but I will do it. I will come into this House to debate any
issue I possibly can, but let us not play those games. Members of
the Reform Party came into this House so full of the lofty
principles of government and were so prepared to defend the rights
of the people and honour what the people wanted to hear. I am
appalled to see you playing those kind of silly, trivial games.
(1330)
The Deputy Speaker: I ask all members to not refer to other
members as ``you''. Third person singular or third person plural,
please.
Mr. Werner Schmidt (Okanagan Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, I
wish to refer to my hon. colleague's comment about not wasting
our time.
201
If he were really serious about this, which I think he is, at least
he certainly looks sincere, the important thing is to get procedural
motions like this off the table. They are on the table and we are
now obligated to get involved in the debate. However, there is a
very big issue at stake here.
The point I want to register was made very effectively by the
hon. Pat Nowlan when he was in the House. He did it on the
occasion of the 1991 debate. I refer rather extensively to some
things he said. At that time he said to me: ``In the years that I have
been here it would boggle the mind in terms of the effective
working of Parliament to do what is being projected here''. It is
exactly the same thing the previous government did in the House in
1991.
He said:
What really disturbs me, having spent a good many years on the opposition
side, is that we know, and my former friends across the way know from when
they were on the opposition, that the prorogation date is sometimes used as the
negotiating lever to get bills to move along. Under the tradition and history of
the British parliamentary system come prorogation everything on the Order
Paper died. It was then incumbent on the government and the responsibility of
the government in the new session to reintroduce the bills and/or try to work
matter matters out by consent, as they so often did.
I have a good memory also. There were many times in this Chamber in which
a deal was made before prorogation. Sometimes by unanimous consent bills
which were on the Order Paper, certain ones being difficult to agree with
perhaps, were nevertheless put together as a package so they could get through
and could be reintroduced later.
If the government brings in an omnibus motion which has the
effect of lumping all the bills together that were all at the same
stage in the previous session of a Parliament through a formal
motion of the House where it knows it has the numbers to have a
fait accomplis, if you like, of the passage of that kind of a motion,
that puts into jeopardy any future debate on the floor of the House.
That is what the issue is all about.
The question is why would a government, including this one or
any other, that will use this kind of lever really worry about the
concerns of the opposition? It does not care about what the
opposition thinks. It knows that come prorogation the debate will
be cut off and since it has the majority in the new Parliament the
government knows it will not lose anything.
What in the world is this all about if we do what is proposed
here? I cannot help but refer to the hon. Don Boudria. I am pleased
he is here to hear himself quoted again.
The Deputy Speaker: Members, we are all rusty. Present sitting
members of the House have to be referred to by their riding and
ministers by their portfolio.
Mr. Schmidt: I apologize. I stand corrected. I was referring to
the hon. member for Glengarry-Prescott-Russell. I believe
other members have mentioned this today. I refer to a second
paragraph which I do not think has been read. The hon. member
will hear himself quoted again, from May 28, 1991.
(1335)
An hon. member: That was then.
Mr. Schmidt: Yes, that was then and he has learned extremely
well. He has learned to debate cleverly on both sides of the issue. If
it were not so serious, it would be a nice game. To become a skilful
debater one must be able to debate both sides of an issue.
He said: ``What we are doing is amending completely the rules
of the House by adopting this motion. Were we to do so or were this
motion to be ruled in order, the implications of the ruling of this
motion in order would be such that I fear we could render this
House of Commons totally irrelevant and redundant''.
He went on to say: ``We would simply deem everything and
anything to have been passed, to have been at third reading or to
have been at any stage or for any reason the government did not
want to proceed with other stages of the bill''.
Is that not exactly what the hon. member told us 20 minutes ago?
It is most interesting what happens when one walks from this side
of the House to that side of the House. When they have all the
numbers on their side, they begin to think anything they do has to
be right.
At that time the government won the debate. Of course it did,
had the numbers, exactly as Pat Nowlan put it so clearly. It reminds
me very much of what Gordon Gibson said in the Globe and Mail
on Tuesday of this week: ``Our system effectively provides for a
four year elected dictatorship with an astonishing concentration of
power in the Prime Minister's office and the cabinet. Not
unnaturally, those enjoying this power think it is a pretty good
system''.
That is the seriousness of the issue before us. We really should
be reflecting the wishes of the people. Sometimes procedural
motions are brought to the floor of the House to give advantage to
levering certain bills to move things faster or slower, the
suggestion being that somehow the opposition side has a say in
these things.
As my hon. colleague from Calgary Centre said so clearly, we do
not have a say. It is in the hands of the government. Gordon Gibson
said very clearly that in the final analysis the Prime Minister can
decide whatever he wants.
Now I refer to the hon. member for Kingston and the Islands. Let
him hear what he had to say on May 28, 1991. This is excellent.
The hon. member will have his memory refreshed. He could
probably say the very same thing today. He should. If he were on
this side of the House I am sure he would. This is really interesting.
The hon. member said: ``A new definition of democracy has been
introduced. That is what this government is trying to introduce to
202
Canada. Frankly, it is time we exposed the-''-do you remember
what you said?
Mr. Milliken: Fraud.
Mr. Schmidt: Fraud. He called it a fraud but today it is good
stuff. He goes on. It gets better: ``I want to deal with the propriety
of the motion the government introduced. I suggest it is contrary to
all the practices of this House for the last 124 years. It is a breach of
the proprieties of this place. While the Speaker has ruled that the
motion is in order and I respect that ruling, I suggest that it is still
morally wicked''.
(1340 )
What a statement. That is what he said when he was on this side
but now that he is part of the government he says that is okay. It is
as morally wicked today as it was then. The morals have changed.
It is amazing. One walks across the House and the morals become
different. Is it not interesting? What has happened in this place?
Then he drew his conclusion: ``I suggest that this is wrong and it
is wickedly wrong. It is a gross violation of the constitutional
principles on which the House has operated since Confederation''.
Listen to the loftiness of these phrases. ``Indeed it is contrary to the
whole practice of British parliamentary tradition for 900 years and
nothing like this has ever been tried before. I suggest it is wrong.
The government knows it is wrong''.
It is very interesting that at that time the hon. member was joined
by the now premier of Newfoundland who said: ``The government
party of the day regrettably for the country, a country in desperate
need of leadership on the constitutional front and on the economic
front, does not have the confidence of the people''. Even as a
member of the opposition, one wanting to replace the governing
party, he made those kinds of comments. What does the
government do? Yesterday the Prime Minister indicated to the
House that the back of the deficit had been broken. That is an
interesting conclusion when the Prime Minister, the Minister of
Finance and the speech from the throne said very clearly that the
deficit shall be at least or not more than 2 per cent of the gross
domestic product.
That does not suggest the deficit's back has been broken. It has
not made any indication either of how seriously the fiscal situation
of the country has been damaged and continues to be damaged.
An hon. member: That is a lot more progress than your Tory
friends made.
Mr. Schmidt: This is interesting. The hon. member says that is
more progress than the Tories made. I draw to the member's
attention that since he and his colleagues came into the House they
have added to the debt $76 billion plus. That is their contribution to
the fiscal health of the country. It is on the backs of the people that
the deficit and the debt ride, and they are getting heavier and
heavier. I suggest to the Prime Minister and to my colleagues
opposite that the back that is being broken is the back of the
taxpayer, not of the deficit.
There comes a time when one almost has to say that what we
have here is a tyranny of the majority. It is not the interests of the
people that are being addressed in this motion but the convenience
of a particular group of people who not want to live by the
procedures that we have all agreed to. They want to change them.
It would be one thing to say this will simply bring back the bills
the government wants back on the table. Then it ties that with this
sort of noble condescending attitude, almost patronizing, saying it
will also allow private members' bills to come forward. That does
not change the principle one iota. It seems the government wants to
get some kind of prestige, or to drain some credibility from the fact
that yes, private members' bills will also be able to come to the
table. If it was morally wicked before, if it was a fraud before, it is
no less wicked and no less a fraud today than it was then.
(1345)
I suggest that the sooner we get on with the business of the
country and deal with things like the deficit, justice issues and
keeping criminals off the streets, we will be far better off than
wrangling here on whether we should bring back all that stuff that
was really supposed to have been stopped by prorogation at the
whim and fancy of the government whenever it wishes to do so.
Mr. Paul Zed (Parliamentary Secretary to Leader of the
Government in the House of Commons, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I
was wondering if my hon. colleague would want to share his views
on the cost issues. I am not talking about financial costs. I am
talking about the human costs of the various committees that
participated throughout the previous session. I know that many of
our constituents throughout the country have invested a great deal
of time and effort in coming forward to share their views on various
matters before committees at various stages.
I was curious about what are the hon. member's views or his
party's views on the subject of costs and whether it is something
that should be given consideration.
Mr. Schmidt: Mr. Speaker, I am so happy that my colleague
across the way asked that question. It really gives me a chance to
say something about the speed with which legislation is introduced
to the House and the substance of the legislation that is introduced.
It is almost like having a car that is trying to go uphill but the ice on
the highway is so slick that the car cannot move at all. It is spinning
like crazy but it is not going anywhere. That is what is happening
here.
203
If the hon. member is really concerned about the costs that were
incurred, then the legislation should have been pushed through the
House on a regular basis, instead of trying to force it all through
at the end.
Let us take as an example the internal trade agreement. The
agreement was signed on July 1 the year before. A whole year later
the bill finally came to the House. We would told we should pass it
into law so that it can be put into operation. What was the delay?
Certainly the opposition did not delay it. The standing committee
did not delay it. Somebody else delayed it. I wonder if it is not the
same group that has the opportunity to bring bills back to the House
if this motion is passed.
The concern I have is this. How much time has the government
wasted by not moving faster than it did? If the government wanted
to bring all these bills forward, why did it not just keep on going?
We lost a whole month.
Mr. Silye: Why did you prorogue?
Mr. Zed: Mr. Speaker, I appreciate, as I often do, the views of
my learned colleague. The only difficulty I have is this. What about
the human investment in time, energy and the quality of the debate
that was advanced prior to prorogation?
I would like to ask my hon. colleague if he would comment on
that one specific issue. Is it not a valid comment that there were
significant investments made in bringing people to Ottawa or
having our committees travel throughout the country? Would it not
be a pity to lose all of the very good work that was done by all
members on all sides of the House and particularly at the
committee level? I ask my hon. colleague to comment on that
aspect.
(1350 )
Mr. Schmidt: Mr. Speaker, I would be happy to comment on the
human investment. The sad part is that so much of the human effort
has been completely ignored by the government.
All kinds of witnesses come before committees, not only the
industry committee but a number of other committees, and what
effect has it had on legislation? What effect has it had in bringing
about any amendments? The hon. member should recognize that
that kind of thing is much more debilitating than for the
government to take the position that if it prorogues it can bring that
stuff back because some of that investment of time and energy is
significant and should not be lost.
It is not lost. We have heard all those things. If the government is
really serious it will bring forward that legislation very quickly and
very clearly. It will not have to go through all of that debate again.
We know that and I believe the hon. member knows that.
If there were ever a time when we should be sensitive to the
human element it is now. We should recognize the terrible position
that people are put in when they are not sure about what is going to
happen to the criminal who is incarcerated for committing a violent
crime, who has raped their daughters and is now out on the street
again without any restriction whatsoever. That is the concern. That
has a far greater human cost than the debate that has happened, that
has not been forgotten and does not have to be repeated even if the
bill is presented at first reading. That is the human cost.
Mrs. Dianne Brushett (Cumberland-Colchester, Lib.): Mr.
Speaker, it is very interesting to hear the laughter and the jesting
going on this afternoon, looking back at the history of what has
been said and leaving a very distorted picture of what this motion is
all about today.
When the government House leader brought this motion in this
morning it was clear and simple. It serves all members of this
House. It gives an opportunity of bringing any legislation of the
government and any legislation of any private member back to the
floor of this House as long as it is identical to the way it was
presented prior to prorogation and as long as it has passed second
reading. That is very simple and very appropriate for the public
who are listening today to understand what this motion does.
The opposition has been misleading the public this afternoon.
They talked about anything and everything. They talked about the
deficit and about changing policies. This legislation was brought
forward where you have the opportunity if you have a voice,
Reform members and Bloc members, you have an opportunity in
debate-
The Acting Speaker (Mr. Kilger): I am sorry to be such a bore,
colleagues. I know it is early in the session but please just delete
the word you and say they or he.
Mrs. Brushett: Thank you very much, Mr. Speaker. I have been
a little distracted with some of the history on this debate. I have no
history in this place except as a 1993 member so it is interesting to
be reminded of what has gone on in the past, however boring I
think it was.
The point of this legislation is to give us the opportunity to
proceed efficiently in the business of government. Each and every
member of this place was elected in 1993 to pass legislation that
works effectively and efficiently for our society. Legislation that
was in progress, for want of a better word, that was left on the
Order Paper before prorogation, is to come back for debate. There
will be opportunities to add amendments and make changes. It does
not mean that any hon. member in this House must remain silent.
We have talked about many things here today. Some bills, such
as C-111, the employment insurance act, has been debated and the
public has talked about it for several months. However, that is what
legislation is all about. It is to seek consensus not only from
members in this House but from the public as well. The hon.
member for Okanagan Centre talked about the debt. He said that
we have added to the debt. This is misleading. This government has
reduced the deficit. As the Minister of Finance brings in the budget
204
next Wednesday afternoon at 4.30 p.m., the public will see how we
have reduced the deficit.
(1355)
In terms of the debt, it is out there; it exists. However, this will
be part of our longer term legislation and the debt will be taken care
of once we have dealt with the deficit. I must remind the hon.
members of the opposition of first things first and keep our
priorities straight.
When we talk about the Unemployment Insurance Act, about
Bill C-111, the public has advised us of what it would like to see in
that bill. We have listened to the public. As it goes into committee
for more discussion those amendments, those considerations will
be listened to. We have the interest of the Minister of Human
Resources Development as well as his expression of opportunity to
hear those recommendations and see if they can be fitted into this
legislation. The opportunity lies in the meetings in committee to
present those views.
I would suggest this misleading of the public here today is a
distortion of what this House is about. It is a distortion because we
came here promising the public we would act more responsibly,
more maturely and not spend our time on issues of procedure.
We bring many motions to the floor on House procedure, but was
that not also a promise to the public, that we did not have to look
back to 100 years ago, that it is time we updated some of the
legislation, some of the standing orders, some of the House
procedures. The House procedures committee is a committee of all
parties in this House.
There is the opportunity and I would challenge any member. If
an hon. member believes they do not have that opportunity, it lies
there for each and every one of us, whether we are backbenchers on
the government side or whether we are in opposition.
The motion presented this morning by the government House
leader is very clear. I believe the public, in the interest of
efficiency, in the interest of money that has been spent in hearing
public views, in holding public hearings across this nation, would
be in support of progressive motions that see legislation move
forward.
If the hon. member believes this is not the wish of the public,
that it is not the wish of the Canadian taxpayer, then I believe the
opportunity lies that those views, those statistics, those numbers of
convincing, of otherwise, could be brought forward in committee.
The opportunity to carry legislation forward is a reality and it is
part of a credible government's mandate. Some of the bills will
come forward if the members so choose, but this is all inclusive.
Any member has the opportunity to bring a bill forward as long as
it is identical and has passed second reading; that is private
members' bills as well as government bills.
There is not selectivity, as some members have suggested. It is
an opportunity for all bills. As we sat here last year there was a bill
from the Reform member on grandparents' rights and of
grandparents' accessibility to their grandchildren. As their
offspring go through divorce or separation there can be problems of
keeping the children at a distance from grandparents.
The gallery was full of grandparents that day as I spoke on that
bill on behalf of the Reform member. That bill has excellent
content that serves the children of this country, that serves them in
a way such that they will have that support morally, lovingly, with
nurturing and financially from grandparents who are a little more
distanced from the situation. That was a private member's bill from
the Reform Party. I would suggest this is an opportunity for every
member in the House to support this motion today to see that it
does pass which would bring these bills back for debate and for
passage.
(1400)
There is an opportunity as well when we talk about deficits,
debts and the cost that we forget that and think of what we have
been through. I am convinced the public does not want us to delay
in time and cost in not passing this motion which was brought
forward today and not bringing those bills back here to debate but
they want us to continue on to get them off the slate.
We have a responsibility and we have taken that. Every member
in the House has an opportunity through the standing committees
which are broad committees representing all parties in this House. I
think it is misleading when we tell the public before the cameras
today in the Parliament of Canada that we are doing anything but
practising good government.
[Translation]
Mr. Roger Pomerleau (Anjou-Rivière-des-Prairies, BQ):
Mr. Speaker, I have listened carefully to the comments of my
colleague, and I have a question for her. I am not very familiar with
House procedure, but I do know that according to the statutes
prorogation means all bills die on the Order Paper.
The government knows it. This has always been the case since
there is a government. The government is free to prorogue or not,
but it knows very well that when it does, all bills automatically die
on the Order Paper. This very government, when it was sitting on
the opposition benches, was very critical of the Conservative
government because it did not abide by the rules of this House.
How can the government take such a position now? Is the hon.
member trying to tell us that the government is free to ignore our
205
procedures for the sake of convenience? That is the fundamental
question. Do we have procedures or do we not? My colleague is
telling me procedures can be changed-and I agree with her-but
let the government change them, then. But as long as they stand as
they are, it should not ignore them just because it is more
convenient. That is the fundamental question.
[English]
Mrs. Brushett: Mr. Speaker, it gives me great pleasure to
address that very interesting question. I find it interesting that the
hon. member for Anjou-Rivière-des-Prairies whose purpose here
is to separate the country refers to the origins of the Queen, the
King and the reign of British rule, that it is so great and this House
has no opportunity to change those historic perspectives as they
were.
I assure the hon. member that as part of the Liberal promise, as
part of the 1993 election platform, this government took the
responsibility and the obligation to the Canadian people to manage
the Parliament of Canada more efficiently. Also, in the name of the
Canadian taxpayer we would introduce procedures that seemed
fitting of 1996 and the progress we should be making as we move
toward the 21st century.
I have the greatest respect, as all hon. members do in the House,
for the historic value and the traditions, but I believe it is not the
absolute rule that we live within the monarchy. We know the views
of the separatist members and their purpose and intent here.
This House does have the responsibility to serve the Canadian
people and to bring forward legislation that is progressive and
efficient. In the name of the Standing Committee on Procedure and
House Affairs governing this place, in which all members, even
separatist members are a part of that committee, then we do have
that responsibility. I believe we are only serving the Parliament in a
wise, efficient manner using House procedures.
(1405 )
Mr. Dick Harris (Prince George-Bulkley Valley, Ref.): Mr.
Speaker, I have a very simple question for the hon. member. Could
she tell me the specific reason the Liberal government prorogued
the House? Could I have a simple answer?
Mrs. Brushett: Mr. Speaker, it is part of this government's
platform, part of its promise to the Canadian people to deliver good
government. Part of it was to restructure the Unemployment
Insurance Act, part of it was to restructure the standing committees
and all procedures in this House, and it was to make the House
deliver legislation more efficiently and economically.
I am sure the hon. member knows the red book promise. He
probably knows the red book as well as any other member in the
House.
Mr. Harris: Probably better.
Mrs. Brushett: Yes, perhaps the hon. member does know it
better than some.
The legislation was introduced according to what the Canadian
people requested. Canadians have requested additional
commitments from the Government of Canada, that we would
respect the five principles of the Canada Health Act; to ensure
health accessibility at no charge except through the public purse for
all Canadians; to ensure that we would provide the kind of
compassionate, caring society; to ensure that we would maintain
the Old Age Security Act and the guaranteed income supplement;
to ensure to the Canadian people that we would do the things that
our government promised.
That is part of why we had a red book. It is part of why we had a
throne speech and it is part of why we have the numbers to run the
Government of Canada today.
Mr. Jim Silye (Calgary Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, my
question for the member is probably the same question my
colleague just asked which she did not answer, the purpose of
prorogation.
To get on to that issue, is it not to wipe off the slate and start over
with the throne speech to set the new direction for the government
with its new vision, with its new hope, with its new ideas for
growth and opportunity? Is it not to go forward instead of going
backward in the first piece of legislation the government
introduces?
The first motion the government has introduced is to bring back
all those old government bills it does not want to leave behind.
Those bills are supposed to die on the order paper.
Prorogation is the cause of this motion and the cause of the
undemocratic use of this Chamber. What is the purpose and why, in
her opinion, did her government prorogue?
Mrs. Brushett: Mr. Speaker, the hon. member has suggested
that we are bringing back all the old government bills, to use his
words. The hon. member forgets that we are bringing back Reform
private members' bills and private members' bills from the Bloc,
the NDP and the Conservatives. We are bringing back all bills that
were in session prior to the break.
The hon. member recognizes that this legislation is excellent
legislation which must be carried through. This legislation needs to
be completed. Canadians want this legislation back on the Order
Paper and they want it passed.
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(1410)
[Translation]
Mr. Pierre Brien (Témiscamingue, BQ): Mr. Speaker, before
getting to the main part of my speech, perhaps I should answer the
question asked by two Reform members. What these two members
and many other people are wondering is why prorogue the session
if the government wants to reinstate everything that was being
considered during last session.
Probably all that has happened in the last few months,
particularly in connection with the Quebec referendum, is one of
the reasons why the government wants to start afresh, to show
Canadians that it has regained control of the situation. But I want to
get back to the main point, because I am not speaking in reply to
the speech from the throne, but rather on Motion No. 1.
This is a motion to reinstate bills that were at various stages
when the session was prorogued. That would appear logical, up to a
point, but tradition has it that when a session ends and another one
begins, we make a fresh start. Otherwise, we should have continued
in the same parliamentary session without having a new speech
from the throne and a new beginning.
This behaviour annoys me for two reasons: it shows a lack of
respect for parliamentary tradition and practice, and-this annoys
me even more, as it does many other people who are interested in
politics-it proves that very often one says something when on one
side of the House and something else when on the other side. I will
get back to this in a while, since many members who now sit over
there criticized the then Conservative government when it put
forward a motion very similar to the one we are debating this
afternoon. Just wait and see what their positions were then. It is
rather difficult to understand how they can support this motion
today after all they said against it then.
Let us go back to the first point, which is the lack of respect for
tradition and practice. I agree that some things must be changed,
improved, in the parliamentary system. The problem is that each
and every time changes are made, the opposition parties or the
backbenchers lose some of their powers so that the government, the
executive, can have more power and be able to break or alter a rule
as it pleases to go ahead undisturbed with its agenda.
This is rather disappointing, since all 295 of us here were elected
to represent the people. Our constituents do not want to see our
rights and responsibilities as members of Parliament trampled on;
they want us to play an even bigger role and have an even greater
influence on the parliamentary system.
Of course, my Liberal colleagues will say: ``Motion No. 1 also
enables members to reinstate private members' bills and to carry
on with their consideration in the current session''. But one has to
be aware of one thing: how many private members' bills, and we
can go back as far as we want, actually became law? How many
private members' bills actually went through the whole legislative
process? Very, very few of them.
If the government is proposing this motion authorizing the
reinstatement of measures at the stage they were before in
Parliament, it is to pursue its agenda on bills which it sets great
store by; it is not to please members whose private bills had
completed a stage in the process. This rarely happens.
So, the purpose of motion No. 1 is to deal with government
business, basically everything that comes from cabinet and the
executive branch. Thus, it is not a major argument for the
government. Of course, it sweetens the pill.
If these bills are so important for the government and if they are
so good for Quebecers and Canadians, why did it not introduce
them earlier during the last session? Since it was elected two and a
half years ago, why did it not hurry to introduce these legislative
measures so vital to the operations of the Government of Canada
and to the federal administration?
(1415)
We wonder why. And when we search for answers, we find some
clues. We notice that there has been an atmosphere of panic in the
last few months. That was obvious in the speech from the throne.
The government does not have clear directions for the second half
of its mandate and it is even alluding to the possibility of an early
election to avoid the constitutional agenda of 1997.
I will talk about the second part. I would like to quote some
Liberal members who were in the opposition not so long ago.
Maybe they will go back to the opposition seats. Not all of those
who are here now, but some of them. The hon. member for
Ottawa-Vanier, now in the Senate, speaking to the Conservative
motion, declared this: ``I cannot understand why this government,
these government bullies now want to impose their will on the
House of Commons''.
He was talking about government bullies imposing their will. I
would be curious to know if the same bullies now work for the
Liberal Party and if the hon. senator still thinks the same way. He
was not alone to speak. There were several of them. There is one I
just saw. He is the Liberal member for Kingston and the Islands. He
declared: ``They have to be reinstated in the usual course, but they
ought to have been introduced and dealt with as new bills in this
session''. That means that a bill must be moved as a new bill and go
through the normal legislative process. He quoted from
Beauchesne, saying that any irregularity of any portion of a motion
renders the whole motion irregular. He fought hard and even
contested the legality of that motion. He presented many arguments
to that effect.
207
One of his colleagues, the member for
Glengarry-Prescott-Russell, who is still with us, was a lot
harsher. He said: ``The implications of ruling this motion in order
would be such that I fear we could render-if a government
wanted to-this House of Commons totally irrelevant and
redundant''.
To render the House of Commons totally irrelevant and
redundant. That is what the member said. He is not a sovereignist, a
separatist, but a member who sits on the other side of the House
and who occupies a very important position within the government.
Why has he changed his mind now that he is in a position of
authority? How can that be explained? People become very cynical
about politics when they see individuals change their mind so
drastically in a relatively short time span.
How can a politician who says that he is working for the
well-being of Canadians and wants to improve their social and
economic standards of living have credibility when he contradicts
himself constantly. People do not know when we are telling the
truth. They do not know who among us is telling the truth. It is very
serious. It is a lack of respect for the office we hold, for the
institution for which we work, which, ultimately, is there to serve
the people.
It is surprising to see those people, who claimed to champion the
cause of integrity and transparency in their red book-which, by
the way, they threw away as soon as the took office-suddenly
adopting the agenda of the previous government in many areas.
Look at what is happening with the reform of social programs
and think of the lack of respect for the institution. They are not
even able to take a position that would be seen as their own, to
promote the role of members of Parliament and to respect the
institution.
If we really wanted to make the institution more efficient, as my
Liberal colleague said, we could evaluate how really efficient
committees are and examine the way they operate. There are many
issues to examine.
The government tries to control everything: House committees,
procedure and all the rest and this is why we have now almost
reached the point where we have a sham of democracy. Some were
complaining about the monarchy earlier, but it is simply disguised.
The real power of individuals in this House is relatively small when
we face actions like those of the government.
(1420)
The Bloc Quebecois wants to be constructive. If I remember
rightly, my colleague for Laurier-Sainte-Marie or my colleague
for Berthier-Montcalm introduced an amendment whereby a bill
could be returned to the stage it was at. Under certain
circumstances, a prorogation can be very useful.
If a minister or a member introduces business from the previous
session requesting the unanimous consent of the House to continue,
he will have it, if the measure is in everyone's interest.
This would avoid having the government simply bringing back
its own agenda, but also all the measures that are, to all intents and
purposes, uncontested, approved by all the members and must be
approved by all Quebecers and Canadians, given that we are from
very different parties. In this regard, the amendment would
therefore be constructive.
In the few minutes I have left before question period, I would
like to mention that the member preceding me referred to the fact
that we were sovereignists or separatists, whatever your
preference, and that she was surprised at our interest in following
parliamentary rules, because this is the British parliamentary
system.
Since our arrival here, we have shown respect, probably even
more than the government, for parliamentary institutions and rules.
We are fighting democratically. We are seeking major change,
major change in the future of Quebecers and of Canadians, because
we want to build a relationship between peoples.
That does not prevent us from respecting institutions and from
waging a democratic struggle. Thus this sort of remark reveals a
considerable lack of understanding of our action and role here. I am
pleased to be able to tell her that we are not attacking institutions.
We are not attacking individuals, we are not attacking Canadians.
We are leading a battle for Quebecers, because we think it is the
best road for the future for the people of Quebec and the people of
Canada.
When we are told that, in the end, it is in our interest to block the
process-I remember that, when we first came into the House of
Commons, everybody said that the Bloc would be doing anything
to block the conduct of business of the House. People had fun
making puns. It did not happen that way. We allowed for an
improvement of the conduct of business. We co-operated a lot.
There was much co-operation between House leaders of all parties
to ensure that the House may conduct its business in the most
efficient manner, to avoid using procedural technicalities to
prolong debates late into the night and achieve nothing. We
allowed for an improvement in the conduct of business of our
institution. That is how we want things to be.
Motion No. 1 does not improve the functioning of the institution
and, I am convinced, will not go down in history as a measure
having furthered the British parliamentary system in the best
interest of Canadians. On the contrary, it gives more power to the
208
executive, to cabinet which is really in charge of the government
and controls MPs, who, when they protest in caucus-as is now the
case-are threatened with a general election to keep them in line.
In that sense, it is a threat. I find it interesting when they threaten
to send certain MPs from their own party to the slaughter house.
Personally, I am not against the fact that you could call an election.
The only danger is that you may lose your Prime Minister in the
battle, but we shall see. When the time comes, voters in
Saint-Maurice will be the judge.
I am quite sure that there are Liberal members in this House who
are thinking, in their hearts of hearts: ``This is true; this is another
thing we are doing which does not make any sense.'' Let them keep
it up.
If they cannot publicly side with us to defend the rules and the
role of members, at least, when they meet in the privacy of their
caucus, let them raise the issue with the cabinet members, who
control this Parliament, and with all those behind the scene, who
yield some power, and tell them: ``Listen, there are limits to how
far you can lead us; when you decide to make a new speech from
the throne and start a new session, it is to make a fresh start in
several areas and the same should apply to the bills introduced
during the last session.''
To conclude, I would like to point out that the unemployment
insurance reform is among these bills, and nobody will convince
me that it is not controversial and cannot be improved. Why not
take advantage of a new session to put this unemployment
insurance reform on a more solid footing? This way, at least,
everybody's interests would be served.
Let have some self-respect and not change one's mind when
changing side in the House; let us not make an about-face as did the
member for Kingston and the Islands who has completely changed
his minds on this motion. Furthermore, let us follow parliamentary
procedure and try to make the role of member of Parliament as
efficient as possible.
[English]
Mr. Jim Silye (Calgary Centre, Ref.): Mr. Speaker, it is quite
obvious that the purpose of prorogation of the government was
strictly to introduce a new throne speech.
Between now and Christmas there probably will not be any new
substantive pieces of legislation introduced by the government.
That is why it wants to reintroduce through Motion M-1 all of the
previous bills without any notification to the opposition members.
We will not know what bills it wants to bring back. It will be able to
put them back at whatever stage it wants. This is a contravention of
the democratic process in the House.
The current Minister of Health, the member for Cape
Breton-East Richmond, had this to say about this type of action
taken by the previous government: ``I contend that the motion is in
principle unacceptable and that it seeks to circumvent, indeed to
subvert, the normal legislative process of this House. In the past
this kind of thing has only been done by unanimous consent. Now
the government is seeking to establish an ominous precedent by
attempting to force this procedure on the House. This is an
offensive and dangerous departure from the practices of all
parliamentary bodies''.
The current premier of Newfoundland, the former minister of
fisheries in the government, had this to say about this type of
activity which the government is now doing: ``We see the decision
by the government today to put this motion before the House as a
confirmation of the destruction-and that is what it is-of our
parliamentary system of government''.
Another Liberal member of the House from Halifax had this to
say about the Conservative government on this same issue: ``I can
only say that the government should hang its head in shame. One
wonders today why the government prorogued the House of
Commons last time''.
I agree wholeheartedly with the words of the member for
Kingston and the Islands. When in opposition he had this to say
about this very action taken now by his government which he
criticized. I could not say it better. I will have to use his words and I
express my support for his conviction, his integrity, his intelligence
on this issue: ``If the royal prerogative is to mean anything, the
prorogation ended those bills. They have to be reinstated in the
usual course but they ought to have been introduced and dealt with
as new bills in this session. That is the proper procedure in the
absence of unanimous consent, not this fiasco that we are wasting
taxpayers' money on and doing now. What the government is doing
by this, and let us make it perfectly clear what is happening here, is
short circuiting the legislative process''.
[Translation]
Mr. Brien: Mr. Speaker, the member for Calgary Centre found
some very interesting points in the position of the member for
Kingston and the Islands. I also found some very eloquent
comments of his. He said: ``A new definition of democracy-That
is what this government is trying to introduce to Canada-I suggest
it is perhaps one of the worst outrages that has been perpetrated in
this House in many years-it is still morally wicked of the
government to proceed with this motion''. We could go on and on
with quotations like that. There are many.
209
He is not alone. The current finance minister, the member for
LaSalle-Émard, once declared: ``We find ourselves in the
situation we are now in. The bill died on the Order Paper. In its
supreme arrogance and lack of understanding, this government
comes to us and says: `we would like to reinstate it'''.
These are the same people who today are tabling this motion.
Nothing further needs to be said, to know that such actions
contribute largely to the results of polls showing a 7, 8 or 10 per
cent credibility rating for politicians. Some opinion polls even give
figures as low as 2 per cent. I believe these people should feel
responsible for that situation and should stop changing direction
constantly.
They still have an opportunity to retain their credibility if they
change their position and withdraw their motion so that the
situation can go back to normal. They only have to return all those
bills they want passed to the first reading stage. This is all I had to
say.
The Deputy Speaker: It being 2.30 p.m., this House stands
adjourned until Monday next at 11 a.m.
(The House adjourned at 2.31 p.m.)