Good afternoon, Madam Chair, ladies and gentlemen of the committee.
I'm here with you actually on International Human Rights Day. I'm not sure whether your Parliament will mark this event, but 72 years ago, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which addresses the political rights of democratic societies. So I wanted to point it out.
Thank you for the opportunity to participate in your study. I have read the report entitled “August 2020 Prorogation—COVID-19 Pandemic,” in which the government sets out the reasons for deciding to prorogue Parliament on August 18 and to set the start of the 2nd session of the 43rd Parliament for September 23, 2020.
As a contribution to this debate, I propose to comment on the decision to prorogue by talking about prerogatives, hypocrisy and democracy.
Let's talk about prerogatives first. The prorogation of the 43rd Parliament was decided by the Governor General of Canada on the advice of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in exercising a prerogative power. This may be the first time the members of the committee hear of this, but the source of this prerogative seems to be in a memorandum outlining some prime-ministerial duties, and adopted on October 25, 1935. I have actually appended to my opening remarks the official version of that memorandum in the English language, available only in the English language, and I therefore hope that my opening statement will be translated.
The interesting part about this declaration, the memorandum, is that it refers to matters that fall within the special prerogative of the prime minister, including the dissolution and convocation of Parliament. Prorogation is not mentioned in the memorandum. So I wanted to bring that to the attention of the committee and invite you to consider whether it really is a prime minister's special prerogative or whether the prerogative exists only for the dissolution and convocation of Parliament. Does the Prime Minister really have the power to recommend the prorogation of Parliament as Prime Minister Trudeau did before him, but as Prime Minister Harper and other prime ministers in Canada's constitutional history also have done?
Let me talk about hypocrisy. I regret that I have to use that word because it is a harsh one. However, in the report before you, which explains the reasons for the recent prorogation, the reasons cited are clearly difficult to identify at first. I personally had great difficulty in identifying them when I read the report. My understanding is that they are revealed in the conclusion, which states the following:
In considering the challenges immediately before us, the experience from the first wave behind us, and the hard work still ahead, it was very clear in August that we needed to reset the agenda and obtain the confidence of the House, in order to move forward.
So there are two reasons, two obligations that the government seems to be imposing on itself: to reset its agenda and to obtain the confidence of the House. In my statement, I confess my hesitation about prorogation being needed to reset the agenda. The government is constantly resetting its agenda and can reset it, of course, in a subsequent Speech from the Throne without having to prorogue Parliament. It can follow the normal parliamentary calendar, the one it has used and shared with other members of the House.
As for the confidence of the House, on August 18, 2020, the government did have the confidence of the House. It did have the confidence of the House, so this is not a reason; it is not a valid reason. We know the real reasons. Some people will have difficulty admitting that the real reason was to shut down the committees and make them lose their mandate to study the WE Charity matter. This is the case for four of your House of Commons committees: the Standing Committee on Finance, the Standing Committee on Government Operations and Estimates, the Standing Committee on Access to Information, Privacy and Ethics, and the Standing Committee on Official Languages. Those reasons are not mentioned in the report. This report is therefore no demonstration of transparency, but a sad example of hypocrisy.
My last point is about democracy. Let me bring to the committee's attention the important ruling of the U.K. Supreme Court, handed down on September 24, 2019, about the right to exercise the power of prorogation.
In a case about Brexit, the U.K. Supreme Court stated that the power of prorogation cannot be exercised without respect for Parliament's ability to exercise its constitutional functions as a legislature. This decision should influence the course of events in Canada. In the future, prorogation should not be exercised as it has been and should not prevent Parliament from continuing the serious consideration of a matter such as the WE Charity.
Madam Chair, members of the committee, thank you for your attention.