You must eat it now.
This whole debate about time is great.
Let us go back to July 25, 1969, for the benefit of those preparing the record of these proceedings. That was when a certain prime minister, the Right Honourable Pierre Elliott Trudeau, made some rather interesting remarks on how he perceived the opposition of the day, during a heated debate in the House. I'm going to quickly read two of his juicier comments. Here is the first:
I think we should encourage members of the opposition to leave. Every time they do, the I.Q. of this house rises considerably.
I am not so sure that the Speaker would be too thrilled to hear us talk like that in the House today, or that he would even allow it.
Back to the committee and the matter at hand. The Right Honourable Pierre Elliott Trudeau was on quite a roll in his praise—shall we call it—for the opposition. I think the opposition members will really appreciate this next tidbit, because to know where you're going, you have to know where you've been. Here it is:
The opposition seems to think it has nothing else to do but talk. They say: if there is a problem, we will talk. If there is a difficulty, we will talk about it. If the government is going too slowly, we will talk about it. If there is a real problem in some part of Canada, we will talk about it. That is all they have to do. They do not have to govern, they have only to talk. The best place in which to talk, if they want a forum, is, of course, parliament. When they get home, when they get out of parliament, when they are 50 yards from Parliament Hill, they are no longer hon. members—they are just nobodies, Mr. Speaker.
I thought the comments fitting given what we've heard here today about our role and how certain prime ministers might view the role of the opposition in Parliament. It's quite a simplistic view. When I read this, I thought maybe a mid-life crisis was to blame. Mr. Trudeau was 49 at the time, and our current prime minister is around 45, I think. When you're going through a mid-life crisis, I think you start to detest the opposition.
The reason I brought it up was to give my friend a chance to finish his salad; it was not in reference to his fine remarks.
At the end of the day, I think being prime minister can be annoying, as we saw today at the end of question period. The Prime Minister answered all of the members' questions without having to change the Standing Orders. It is worth pointing out because he spent nearly an hour answering members' questions.
I say “answering” facetiously. What he really did was read his talking points for 45 minutes. He did that without having to change the Standing Orders. Fortunately, he is still able to be in the House of Commons four other days a week, because right now, he does not have the moral authority to not show up those four days. We have seen, then, that he does not need to change the rules.
Although the opposition can come across as annoying and disruptive to a government that is trying to push through its agenda, the role of the opposition is precisely to bring the prime minister to heel and to reign in the arrogant attitude that comes with power. Power breeds arrogance because it allows you to do all kinds of things. If no one is keeping an eye on you, you might abuse that power. That is where the opposition comes in. That is why we are here this evening. That is why Mr. Genuis and my fellow members on the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs are, one after the other and hour after hour, driving home the fact that the opposition has a role to play.
The current rules allow the opposition to perform its role, and, as my colleague in the NDP said earlier, we will fight to the death. We will not give up.
What's more, one day, the Liberals will be out of power and in the opposition.