That's good.
I want to turn to the notion of “partisan”. I've had this conversation with one of Monsieur Denis' colleagues. One of the biggest concerns I have as a parliamentarian is that I belong to a political party that is a party in Parliament, and the very word “partisan” means “of a party”.
We know that the bylaws make it very clear that parliamentary functions relating to the position of the member, “wherever performed and whether or not performed in a partisan manner”.... It's just part of the idea of “parliamentary” that we're at least permitted to be partisan. There are independents, but we're permitted to be partisan.
Parties are built on the very structure of Parliament. The Parliament of Canada Act obviously makes that clear. We have a governing party and an official opposition that has to be a party to be an official opposition. Again, we have the Members By-Law that recognizes that reality.
My concern is that in all of what's been going on, this word “partisan” is being thrown around in a way that frankly could be undermining the average Canadian's understanding of the legitimacy of being partisan in a parliamentary sense, partisan while engaging in parliamentary functions. For example, when I say “Stephen Harper” in my communications, in my householders, for example, that are allowed to go out, I'm talking about the Prime Minister of Canada, who happens also to be the leader of the party in Parliament, the Conservative Party. I'm not referring to Stephen Harper as the leader of the Conservative Party, the extra-parliamentary party.
When I refer to Tom Mulcair as the leader of the official opposition, I'm referring to him as the leader of a party in Parliament. When in one of my mailings I say “members of the NDP team”, I mean members of the NDP team of MPs, for example in Toronto. There's a lot of sous-entendu. There are a lot of references that I make as a parliamentarian, and frankly, as a constitutional lawyer, and I make these references understanding that I'm talking about the partisan side of Parliament. That includes the idea that I have absolutely no shame in being part of a caucus engaging in solidarity and wanting to sell to Canadians that we have an amazing leader who is doing X, Y, and Z in Parliament....
My concern is that we have a definition in section 1 of “parliamentary functions” that makes very clear: however partisan. Then we have a list of exceptions, to be more certain of the exceptions. My concern is that those exceptions are being interpreted too expansively to actually protect the idea of parties in Parliament being central to our system.
I'm not asking you to say that the interpretations that have been made by the law clerk's office have been too expansive of the exceptions, but I'm asking whether or not you in any sense understand where I'm coming from. It is that this distinction between parties in Parliament and the extra-parliamentary party has to be made in the space for partisanship when it comes to being a parliamentary partisan and has to be preserved by the BOIE, by PROC, and frankly, by the House administration.