Not just that would be lost. One of the things we pride ourselves on is that no matter how limited we are in the House, when we come to committee, there's latitude from the chair. Often we call each other by first names when we're moving really quickly on issues and getting along, and there's a lot more latitude in creeping a little further away from the subject, as opposed to the rigidness in the House. There are still limitations, as the chair reminds me during the course of my filibuster.
It is also a matter of knowing that you can go to committee and unpack an issue. I talked about water quality being a big issue for Hamilton, and about the environment in Hamilton Harbour, not Burlington Bay. We have that eternal battle with our neighbours.
Partly because I like to talk—again, that's a fair criticism, and I accept it—but more importantly, often it's a matter, when you get to committee.... Many times on bills in the House, we don't even get a chance to speak, because there aren't that many speaking slots. There are 338 of us, and it's just not always possible for everyone who wants to speak on an item to do so, given the limited time, relatively speaking, that it's in the House .
That is offset by the fact that we can come to committee, and we can set up all our arguments, and we can dissect step by step the bill, the motion, or the matter that's in front of us and take the time to reflect in detail on the issues that our constituents care about and the perspective that they have on this issue that is important to their quality of life. Most of us accept that that's a fair trade-off, that we're limited in the House just for practical reasons and due to the laws of physics. There is only so much time. But at committee we have that opportunity.
During my time, if a government member wants to say, “Dave, can I just stop you for a second on that one? Can we delve into that a bit? We see that differently. Your version of that and how it affects your constituents is not the way we see it.”
I'm going to be like, “Sure. What have I got to lose? Nothing. What have I got to gain? Lots.” I have a government member who is listening to what I have to say, who cares about the perspective that I'm bringing on behalf of the people of Hamilton Centre, and they want to make sure that I'm understanding this correctly, or they want to ask questions or make queries about my position. I'm quite willing, Chair. It's very rare that we deny a colleague the opportunity to have the floor as an interruption to our presentation, because I know it's not coming off my time because my time is unlimited. We will be seized with me dealing with this issue until I'm done. Then my colleague from either the Conservatives, the Liberals, or my own caucus will then have an opportunity, and I will respectfully listen to them as they take the time to make the case and break down the issues that affect their constituents. That also would be lost if we had ten-minute time limits.
Other than favouring the government's ability to whiz things through committee more quickly and to have an absolute guarantee of when legislation will be through the House, that's their only justification. That's what this editorial is saying, that if you're making the case that the opposition has too much power, and you're not able to get things through, that doesn't wash. To the best of my knowledge, the right to speak your mind at committee without facing closure or the guillotine, as it's referred to in some parliamentary settings.... You have the right to speak your mind. Isn't that the fundamental right that we all believe we have as MPs?
To that degree, we are all sovereign to the extent that each one of us got here the same way, as flawed as it was: first past the post. We should have proportional representation, but the system is what the system is, and we all got here the same way. As far as I know, since the beginning, at committee, members have had the right to say their piece.
Continuing with the editorial, Chair:
For the record, the government's proposal includes one to limit committee members' interventions to 10 minutes—an obvious attempt to reduce the opposition's ability to make a public display of its dissent by filibustering during hearings.
I just pointed out some of the other things that would be lost if we had an arbitrary 10-minute limitation on what we can say at committee. Even if we can get on the list and go over and over, that's not the same thing.
It continues:
Another one is to implement “programming” motions in which the opposition and government jointly fix the time for debate on bills. This move would allow the government to avoid the stigma of imposing time-allocation motions unilaterally.
Another proposal is for Parliament to adopt Britain's famous Prime Minister's Questions, in which the PM stands in the crosshairs for 30 minutes on Wednesdays taking questions from opposition party leaders. Doing so could well lead to Mr. Trudeau attending only the one Question Period per week, and to diminishing the media's interest in the days he skips....
which we see a lot of, in terms of there not being the attention when the Prime Minister is not here, and he's not here more and more.
further weakening government accountability.
Now, again—to stay timely—we had that yesterday, where the Prime Minister de facto created the prime minister's question period by being the one who stood up and answered every question on a Wednesday. Cute!
The salient point is that not a single rule had to be changed. I won't go long on this, but I've heard an argument—I think it was from one of the committee members, or I might have read it—from a government member, saying that this is such a great idea that we should entrench this wonderful benefit for future parliaments, so that all prime ministers have to do this. Come along. Come along. That doesn't make any practical sense.
It was one of their best arguments for wanting the ability to make changes, and they found a way around it without changing a single rule, so it would seem that now Wednesdays are the Prime Minister's question period. Okay, fine, as long as he's here the other days, too, not all of them, as the Prime Minister has responsibilities, but more than just one day.
To continue:
There are some useful ideas in the government's discussion paper, but they pale in the face of the Liberals' desire to make the life of a majority government even easier.
Somehow, and I'm not sure how, Mr. Chrétien managed three majority governments with these rules, and he managed to pass enough legislation to go back to the people and say, here's what I did with the mandate you gave me. Not to mention that the current Prime Minister's father was able to repatriate the Constitution and bring in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, for which he will forever be remembered as a critically important prime minister, at the very least, in the history of our country. Pierre Elliott Trudeau managed to do all of that with all of these obstructionist rules that exist on the part of the opposition. In fact, he probably had even less.
All those governments—Liberal governments—managed to survive the horrible threat to democracy that filibusters represent by every day, step by step, smothering real democracy and denying the majority government of the day the right to implement the mandate that it was elected to carry out.
Somehow, in the face of all that opposition power and obstructionism, it still managed to repatriate the entire Constitution. But those rules aren't good enough for this government. Maybe those previous Liberal governments had to work far harder than this government wants to, or maybe the nuisance factor has just grown over time, in terms of how the government—the Liberal government—perceives the opposition.
It becomes hard to believe, or pretty thin gruel for the government to argue, that they have to have these rules because the unco-operative opposition is using all the massive powers it has to thwart the will of a duly elected Liberal majority government, or that at the very least it sees a way, as a majority government, to find it, as The Globe and Mail puts it, “even easier” to govern.
That is what the parliamentary system is mostly about, of course: to make sure that the governing party has the easiest possible way in its time in government. We all know that's why Parliament exists: to make life easy for the government.
Of course, that's nonsensical.
To continue:
It is also disillusioning to discover that the Liberals have this all so backward. The imbalance in Canada’s Parliament is weighted entirely in favour of a majority government and its legislative agenda, not the other way around, as Mr. Trudeau’s party absurdly claims.
It's not just “claims” or “alleges”. These are wordsmiths.
We like to think of ourselves as wordsmiths. I would think that if ever anybody deserves the title—I would defer to Mr. Reid and his knowledge in these areas—or if ever there was an appropriate application of the word and the title wordsmith, it would be the editorialists for The Globe and Mail. In other words, they don't throw around words lightly. Their business is words and the meaning of words. They choose those words carefully. I suspect that sometimes they will even consult with each other to make sure that of all the English words available they find the one that is most applicable, in the greatest detail, to the point they want to make in a sentence.
I think it's important to note that they went, I would say, out of their way to put in the word “absurdly” because it is absurd to suggest that Parliament is skewed in favour of the opposition. You can hardly get the sentence out without bursting out laughing. Remember, this is The Globe and Mail using the word “absurdly”.
To continue:
That's because MPs, who were once elected to form governments, and oversee them, now mostly serve the wishes of their parties.
Again, Chair, I've enjoyed many interactions with Mr. Reid, who has a wealth of knowledge on the history of our Parliament and parliaments in general, and of political science. He's a very learned man. I enjoy the interactions.
It wasn't that long ago, I remember, that we were having a discussion about this very point, about how far away we have gotten from the concept of what a parliamentary democracy is really meant to be.
I'll just quickly hearken back to one prime example, and that is that in the Province of Ontario, back in the day, it was so fundamental that, when you elected a member of the provincial legislature, they were your representative. It was their job to represent you in the Parliament, and, collectively, they would form and exercise the powers that were given by the Constitution. That connection between the elected person and constituents was so strong and so well understood. If you were invited by the premier to join the executive council, the cabinet, meaning the crown, you had to resign your seat. Then you had to run again in the riding and get permission for your top priority to no longer be your constituents but the oath and duty you have in your obligations as a minister. That sounds almost like a different country in terms of that relationship, but when you go to the fundamental—