Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Members of the committee, thank you for your invitation to appear today. I am pleased to be here along with my colleague, the law clerk and parliamentary counsel of the Senate, to discuss the scope of the mandate of the committee and address any questions that the committee may have.
As the law clerk and parliamentary counsel of the House of Commons, I am the chief legal officer of the House and my office provides comprehensive legal and legislative services to the Speaker, the Board of Internal Economy, the House, its committees, members of Parliament and the House Administration.
As counsel to the House, its committees and members, my staff and I serve the interests of the Legislative Branch, and provide similar types of legal and legislative services to the House as the Department of Justice provides to the government.
I hope that my remarks and my answers today will assist the committee in its important study.
The Emergencies Act authorizes the Governor in Council to take special temporary measures that may not be appropriate in normal times in order to secure the safety and security of the individual and to preserve the sovereignty, security and territorial integrity of the state during a national emergency. The act expressly provides that the taking of these measures by the Governor in Council is subject to parliamentary supervision and to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the Canadian Bill of Rights.
With respect to parliamentary supervision, the act contemplates that both Houses play an important role in the review of government action pursuant to the act. Shortly after a declaration of emergency is issued, both Houses of Parliament are to be called upon to confirm the declaration of emergency. Any continuation of a declaration of emergency must be confirmed by both Houses of Parliament. A declaration of emergency may always be revoked by either House. Published orders and regulations made under the act can also be revoked or modified with the agreement of both Houses.
Importantly, the act provides for the creation, by both Houses, of this committee, as the Parliamentary Review Committee, with the mandate to review “the exercise of powers and the performance of duties and functions pursuant to a declaration of emergency”. The act mandates the committee to table certain reports before both Houses, and provides that the committee may also revoke or amend any unpublished order or regulation within 30 days of their referral.
While the act itself sets out certain features of the committee and the process in both chambers for the confirmation of a declaration of emergency and its continuation or revocation, the interpretation and application of these provisions are to be made by Parliament and not the courts, as these matters of parliamentary procedure fall under parliamentary privilege. This was demonstrated in the House of Commons on February 17, 2022, when the Speaker of the House rendered a ruling on the meaning of the expression “debated without interruption” found in subsection 58(6) of the act.
I understand that questions have been raised with respect to the mandate of this committee, and how it compares to that of the inquiry that the Governor in Council shall cause to be held “into the circumstances that led to the declaration being issued and the measures taken for dealing with the emergency” pursuant to subsection 63(1) of the act.
The act requires that the inquiry be caused to be held within 60 days after the revocation of the declaration and that its report be laid before each House of Parliament within 360 days after the revocation of the declaration. As the inquiry made by the Governor in Council falls under the responsibility of the executive branch, the committee may wish to hear from counsel from the Department of Justice with respect to their interpretation of its mandate. From my perspective, it would cover both the issuance of the declaration and the measures taken to deal with it.
With respect to this committee, its mandate—which derives from the orders of reference of both Houses and the Emergencies Act—is “to review the exercise of powers and the performance of duties and functions pursuant to the declaration of emergency that was in effect from Monday, February 14, 2022, to Wednesday, February 23, 2022”.
Pursuant to subparagraph (m)(ii) of the House order, the committee may “report to the Houses from time to time, including pursuant to subsection 62(6) of the act,” which provides for a report “at least once every sixty days while the declaration of emergency is in effect” and “within seven sitting days after” the revocation of the declaration, which was done on Tuesday, March 22, 2022.
In my view, the committee clearly has the authority to review the exercise of powers and the performance of duties and functions pursuant to the declaration, which includes the making of the Emergency Measures Regulations and the Emergency Economic Measures Order by the Governor in Council, as well as the performance of duties and functions that the regulations and orders authorized.
While the mandate of the committee does not explicitly include “the circumstances that led to the declaration being issued”, it will be for this committee to determine whether and to what extent a consideration of such circumstances would be relevant and necessary to its review of the exercise of powers, and the performance of duties and functions that took place pursuant to the declaration.
While the committee may be able to deal with certain matters in a more specific manner, other matters may require a consideration of the broader context. The key question for this committee, in my view, would be whether the information is necessary to the committee to fulfill its mandate pursuant to the House's order and the act.
With that, I would be pleased to answer any questions.