Thank you very much, Chair. I thank my colleagues, I really do. That highway's changed somewhere, the road coming in, the parkway.
Thanks, I really do appreciate it. I've been in situations where this wouldn't happen. I won't say that I was always on the right side of how that unfolded, but I appreciate that.
If I can, to jump right in, I will say that this speaks to just the kind of culture we have. Even in the midst of all we're going through, there's still the ability for our colleagues to recognize on a human scale the dynamic of what we do. So thank you very much; I appreciate that element of fairness.
Chair, you'll recall that last night when we left off, one of the points I was making was to try to come to some sense of exactly what the government's up to so we can understand. I had said—and I won't dwell on it, but just to make the reference—that in the beginning, the best that I could surmise was that the government felt that, because it went the nuclear filibuster option the day before the budget, it thought, with all the media being focused on the budget—and, quite frankly, most of the country that was paying any attention to national politics was focusing on the budget. Of course, that always sucks up all the oxygen in the room. Our estimation is that with the government launching its 24-7 filibuster, which is its filibuster in that way, not ours, it thought that because we would get no attention for a couple of days, if necessary it could go into the weekend and it would exhaust us, and the media, when they did finally turn their attention to us, would perceive us to be obstructionist, and therefore we'd start to lose public support. And, of course, in a democracy, the highest power is the public. In this case, again, my sense is that the government hoped that public opinion would turn and that this filibuster would quietly die and go away and leave the road clear for the government to move in with its majority to change the rules at will.
Of course, it didn't happen that way. The first part did, and that was that nobody paid much attention to us downstairs in 112 north. Beavering away, we weren't getting a whole lot of attention. But that started to change once the lack of enthusiasm over the budget, or whatever enthusiasm there was, fizzled and nobody was talking much about the budget, except for maybe the things they pointed out that it didn't do, which seems to be getting more attention than some of the things the government rolled out that it was going to do.
As we headed into last weekend, we found ourselves with a real turning point. We had the government launch its sneak attack on the opposition on the Tuesday; we had the budget on Thursday; and we started to emerge on Thursday and Friday as people realized something else was going on here on the Hill besides the budget, and they looked over there. Another piece that was helpful was the government finally agreeing, to its credit—I give it its due—to take us out of that little corner meeting room downstairs in the basement, where nobody was paying much attention—you'd have to know we were there to find us—and move us up here into one of the two main beautiful committee rooms that we have. That also provides the television infrastructure, which gives Canadians themselves an opportunity to size up what's going on and to draw their own conclusions as to who's representing their interests here and who isn't.
I was pointing that out. That seemed to be the best that at least I could surmise as to why the government went down this road and took this enormous risk. And a huge risk it is, as you can see from where we are now as a result of things not going well for the government.
It took a risk, and it looks as if it's going to be potentially on the losing end of that.
But I will just say parenthetically that we talk about winners and losers. There are no winners here. There's nothing productive being done, unfortunately. Everything we're doing right now is an attempt by the opposition to use what rules we still have, while we still have them, to try to slow down the government, particularly when it's acting undemocratically and in a way that is certainly not consistent with the kind of promises it made and the kind of government it assured Canadians it was going to provide.
As we saw this unfold last week, the media, having finished with the budget, got some sense that, hey, there was something going on here, and followed up. A couple of stalwart media folk, journalists, whose passion is procedure and Parliament and how it functions, who love to get into the minutiae, into the weeds, as we do, had been following it and did a fantastic job. That's a pretty narrow band of the media when we're talking about something as big as public opinion being swayed one way or another on a filibuster, but that provided the groundwork for the rest of the media as they rightfully finished up their work on the budget and turned their attention elsewhere. They began to express their views as to how they saw things.
I think it's fair to say that the flurry of editorials and opinion pieces by opinion leaders in Canada didn't exactly break the way the government had hoped. That's recognizing that it's pretty easy to make these kinds of actions look as though they're obstructionist as opposed to based on a principle, and an important principle. You really need an egregious act on the part of the government, because opposition will throw up resistance. That's what we do. We're the loyal opposition; it's our job to throw up resistance. But not everything is a parliamentary battle and a hill worth dying on. If everything's number one, then nothing is number one.
Anyway, that led to those opinions starting to unfold. Believe me, that made a significant difference, as it does in a pluralistic democracy with free media. I'd like to just draw attention to some of those comments, given that the media play such a key role. By media, I mean in the broadest sense in terms of all social media now. It's not like in the old days when it was just print, radio, and TV, although I'm talking to Mr. Simms, who is far more of an expert on these things than I am in terms of the airwaves. So when I say media, I mean all the bloggers, the tweeters, the social media, and everybody who's paying attention. There are organizations like Samara and other organizations that are dedicated to this, that are picking up on it.
I stand to be corrected by any learned people like Mr. Reid—who I also want to give a special thank you to this morning, who stepped in as I got stuck in that traffic and made sure that my spot at the beginning of this meeting was preserved, and I thank him for that; he's such an honourable man—but to the best of my knowledge, I don't know, but it might even be old terminology. I find, with a lot of the things I say, that people in their twenties and thirties look at me as if I'm speaking Greek. It's the nature of the generational change.
These days, that divide just seems that much bigger than it ever was in terms of what they know and what we don't know, versus what I thought we knew when we were that age and the generation in front of us.
To the best of my knowledge, I think it's still fair to say that The Globe and Mail is the—what's the exact term?—national paper of record. At least that's the term I know. I'm looking for some learned people to give me a nod, one way or another. I'm sure it will get to me.
To the best of my knowledge, that is still the paper of record, meaning that if you wanted to look and see what was happening nationally and get an accurate reflection as a historian—what is it they say about newspapers, “writing history on the fly“ or “the first draft of history” or other such things...?
I thought I'd start with The Globe and Mail, the national paper of record. It's March 31, nice and fresh, within a week. It's headed up “Globe editorial: The dangers in a Liberal plan to 'fix' Parliament”. I'm quoting from the article now:
The opposition parties in Ottawa are in a panic over a proposal by the Trudeau government to change the rules of Parliament. What the government claims is an honest effort to bring “greater accountability, transparency, and relevance” to the House of Commons is, in the eyes of the opposition, totalitarianism run amok.
I wish I'd said exactly that. It's a great turn of phrase, “totalitarianism run amok”.
Think about it. It's The Globe and Mail talking about the Liberals, not some marginalized outfit that attacks everybody and everything and is always over the top—“totalitarianism run amok”. Now, they are saying that it's in the eyes of the opposition. It isn't seeing that, but nonetheless, just see the phrase there.
Let's go on. The very next paragraph has an interesting beginning. It says, “That's not an exaggeration.”
Once again:
What the government claims is an honest effort to bring “greater accountability, transparency, and relevance” to the House of Commons is, in the eyes of the opposition, totalitarianism run amok.
That's not an exaggeration. Interim Conservative Leader Rona Ambrose last week unironically linked the proposed reforms to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's “admiration” for China's dictatorship and his “bizarre infatuation” with the late Cuban dictator, Fidel Castro.
Is Mr. Trudeau trying to turn Canada into a Communist autocracy?