Thank you very much.
I'm going to start by providing some comments.
One of the things that I personally find frustrating about the nature of this prorogation and some of the prorogations under the Harper government was that.... As we've heard some witnesses say already, there is an important routine function of prorogation, and it can be used properly. I found it odd that we never saw the end of a parliamentary session in the last Parliament and I felt that that was based on, frankly, just a kind of ignorance of what prorogation really meant. I think that ignorance persists, and what we saw was a government that, not understanding the proper function of prorogation, earlier this year decided to use it and abuse it as a tool.
Not only did it mean that an important investigation into the WE Charity scandal was prematurely terminated, not only did it mean, and has continued to mean in spite of prorogation, that we're not getting a budget, which I think is important, and we saw that the government is able to speak to its fiscal situation notwithstanding the challenges of the pandemic and therefore, I think, could present a more fulsome budget, but it also meant that in that period of time....
I would say this perhaps to Mr. Turp's point, a month in a half, in some ways, is not a long time, and in other ways it's a very long time. That was a long time for Canadians who were on the Canada emergency response benefit and were waiting to see legislation tabled in the House, to get a sense of what was coming for them at the end of September. The fact that we weren't able to make progress on that issue and that the whole thing was decided within the space of a few days, because the government hadn't left time for them to table legislation to allow a proper conversation to happen, meant a lot of stress and anxiety for Canadians, who knew that the deadline for CERB was coming up and didn't know what was going to replace it. That's the truth. People didn't know. It came right down to the wire. That was another, as far as I'm concerned, shameful aspect of this prorogation, which was not a proper use of it. That's my opinion. Let there be no doubt about it.
I take the point that this is an exercise of political judgment, but I also think it's important, when we talk about the various divisions of power within Canadian society, that we recognize the importance of the legislature, which is far too often passed over in the context of the Canadian system. I find it frustrating that we would need a constitutional amendment to do what some other countries do, and rightly do, which is to require a two-thirds vote of the legislature in order to dissolve. I think it should also be applied to prorogation.
Now, in other fora, not here today but if you look at some of the testimony from the Special Committee on Electoral Reform, one of the subject experts, Professor Hugo Cyr, provided a brief that talks a bit about the power of prorogation and proposes that, although we can't actually make it binding that there should be a parliamentary vote for dissolution or prorogation, one of the things that might be within the purview of the House would be to put in the Standing Orders that if a Prime Minister recommends prorogation or dissolution without having a vote and the consent of the House of Commons, that Prime Minister would be deemed to have lost the confidence of the House.
We have four experts on the matter here today. I'm wondering if we could get a little bit of feedback on that idea or on what other mechanisms which would not require a constitutional amendment, would allow Parliament to assert its authority and demand that it be consulted on questions of either prorogation or dissolution.