Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you to the members of the committee and the clerk for inviting me to appear before you today.
We have been asked to address the government prorogation this past fall.
To do so, I will first explain what purposes prorogation serves. I will then note how prorogation can be abused, before outlining criteria that I believe are useful for judging the acceptability of particular prorogations. Thirdly, I will apply these criteria to the fall 2020 prorogation.
Lastly, I will conclude with thoughts about how we hold governments to account for improper prorogations. I will ask whether we should encourage Canadian courts to limit the scope of the prorogation power, as they did in the United Kingdom.
Why do we have prorogation? Why is it necessary to end a parliamentary session and begin a new one?
A prorogation may be wise or necessary to serve the following purposes: there may be a change of a ministry within a parliament, requiring a new government to lay out its agenda and clear the slate of legislation, so that it can enact its own bills; Parliament may have been in one session for an extended period of time and the government wishes to start afresh; a significant event leads the government to want to pursue a new slate of legislative measures; or, a government wishes to put forth a new parliamentary agenda in anticipation of a general election.
Of course, given the effects that prorogation has, notably terminating government bills, clearing the order paper, resetting committees, and often erasing sitting days, this power can and has been used as a hardball tactic, one that allows the executive to stifle the opposition's ability to hold it to account.
For example, tactical and/or hardball prorogations can be used to: avoid or delay a vote of no-confidence; reset committees that are mounting an inquiry that is politically harmful to the government; and avoid or delay parliamentary proceedings employed to hold government to account.
We can talk about it in more detail.
When prorogation is used that way, it damages our constitutional norms and democracy. How, then, do we distinguish between acceptable, purposeful prorogations and damaging, tactical ones?
Length is one distinguishing factor. Prorogations should be as short as possible. Although Canadian practice has been to have relatively long prorogations, we should be aiming to shorten them, particularly given the increasing questions that surround this power.
Next is the political environment. Are committees holding inquiries that are embarrassing to the government? Is there a vote of no confidence looming? If the answer is yes to these questions, we can be forgiven for assuming that the prorogation is tactical.
A third factor is the parliamentary setting. Has Parliament been sitting often or sparingly? Has the government been subjected to consistent parliamentary scrutiny or has it been avoiding it? The less active a parliament has been prior to a prorogation, the more suspect the decision to prorogue is.
Based on these criteria, how can we evaluate the fall 2020 prorogation?
Clearly, the pandemic represents a significant event that led the government to want to reset its legislative agenda, budgetary posture, and policy priorities. This suggests that the prorogation had a legitimate purpose.
However, the prorogation was unnecessarily long, it reset committees looking into an issue that was embarrassing to the government, and most importantly, from my perspective, it paused and restarted a Parliament that had already sat for far too little time and that was already poorly placed to hold the government to account since the pandemic began in earnest. These factors weigh in favour of a tactical prorogation.
To conclude, then, how do we hold governments to account for tactical prorogations?
Though it may be an unsatisfactory answer, the reality is that we rely on politics to hold governments accountable here. It is up to the opposition to criticize the tactical nature of a prorogation, for the government to explain why it believes it was purposeful, and ultimately for Canadian voters to decide who they side with.
That said, the United Kingdom provides us with another possibility—that is, asking courts to invalidate prorogations that prevent Parliament from fulfilling its constitutional functions without proper justification. I would strongly caution against Canadian courts following this precedent. The line between a purposeful and tactical prorogation is rarely clear. In some cases, the government will engage in a tactical prorogation in response to equally questionable behaviour on the part of the opposition. The acceptability of a prorogation should, in my view, be viewed as a non-justiciable political question that can only be answered in the political arena.
Thank you, Madam Chair.