I agree, Mr. Chair, and perhaps I need to explain to the member why I mentioned the fact that we have evidence from very reputable and experienced and intelligent people with expertise.
This is relevant because it is that kind of debate, that kind of public discussion, that this motion is established to shut down. They want this all over today. They want to wake up tomorrow morning and say thanks that this is over. They want to be able to thank their lucky stars that these people will no longer have a voice, that they won't be recognized in the media, that there won't be news stories about them, because the debate has been shut down and that is yesterday's news: “That was yesterday's news. We had that debate yesterday. We've moved on now. We have the clause-by-clause. We're going back into the House for report stage.” And there is no more talk about the gruesome details of the bill that experts have told us will lead to more crime, more victims, more recidivism. That's what they want to avoid; they want to avoid that discussion.
It is relevant. I beg the forgiveness of the chair if I wasn't making it clear why I was bringing this up. I wasn't doing it to recite that evidence. I think that evidence was called here, and those who paid attention heard it.
The debate about the clause-by-clause is about where that evidence will be brought forward to speak to particular clauses that we have been asked by these experts not to pass, or to modify or change; that debate would include that evidence. But what we've been told by this motion is that we're not prepared to talk about clause-by-clause at all, unless it all happens today and nothing happens tomorrow, and that we're going to sit here all day long until midnight tonight and do it that way.
We haven't even received any indication whatsoever that the government is prepared to accept any of these amendments. What the government wants is to go through the motions here today and limit it to one day: you folks can move your motions, and we'll vote them down, and then it will be all over at midnight and it will be in the House tomorrow—end of story. Let's move on; we won, you lost. That's the story they want to bray about and brag about tomorrow, and they want us to agree with it. They want us to go along with that.
There are lots of quotations about closure, and we're here again doing the same thing.
There was a time, and the time seems to be when they were in opposition, that the Conservatives had a very different attitude toward closure. Here's Peter MacKay, the current Minister of National Defence, who said in 2004:
It is the principle behind the use of the closure motion that really leads us to the point of saying there is no way, it is absolutely impossible, that we could support what the government has done. In less than one calendar week the government has already invoked a closure motion to use the guillotine, to bring down the curtain on meaningful debate in the House of Commons on a number of bills.
Well, we've had that, Mr. Chairman. We've had seven bills on which closure has been invoked since 20 September.
Mr. MacKay continued:
The procedure the government is using to go about doing this is not uncommon. The speed with which the government has acted in this fashion in bringing about closure is a true signal as to how the Prime Minister and the government are going to treat the so-called democratic deficit that the Prime Minister has had a revelation on in discovering that a democratic deficit exists in the country
Well, you know, if there was a democratic deficit then, Mr. Chairman, what we are witnessing now is a democratic recession or depression, or something far worse than a deficit. What we're experiencing now is a failure of democracy, when nine bills can be cobbled together into one and presented to the House, with closure invoked on second reading in order to get it to committee for a fulsome discussion.
A fulsome discussion is what's expected to take place in committee. We have an opportunity supposedly in committee for a full and detailed debate on a clause-by-clause study of the bill. Well, we're not being given an opportunity to do that if this motion is accepted. We're being asked to accept a motion that says that at midnight tonight it's all over. We're being asked to accept that one day's debate is going to be considered sufficient.
Mr. Chair, we've got a lot of concerns about this legislation, and there ought to be not a failure of democracy, there ought to be an opportunity for full debate.
It doesn't have to be done today. Can people get that into their heads? There's no magic about November 17. I didn't think there was any magic about it at 8:44 this morning, but all of a sudden at 8:45 Mr. Goguen decided this is what he wanted to make the debate for the day. All of a sudden, November 17 was the most important day in his calendar and he wanted to make it the most important day in everybody's calendar on the committee, that we should be so enamoured with the day of November 17 that we should spend from 8:45 a.m. to 11:59 p.m. passing this bill in committee when for some time we've had a committee meeting scheduled for today for two hours, another one on Tuesday for two hours, and another one next Thursday for two hours.
I mean, we're reasonable folks over here, you know. If we'd had a debate today at our regular meeting for two hours and made some significant progress, and on Monday we had a conversation or a conference call or a little discussion saying, “What about we finish this up on Thursday? Is that possible? Can we do that? What kind of cooperation do we need to make that happen?”.... I feel pretty confident that members on this side of the House would say, “Yes, we have a number of very important points to make here. We'd like to have a fulsome debate on them.” We could think about what they were and talk back and forth, and we could make it clear that we're very anxious to ensure that proper debate takes place on this particular matter and that particular matter and certain other matters.
We do have nine bills, let's face it, and reasonable people—reasonable people—can find a way to ensure that the parliamentary process continues, that the role of the government is recognized, but that the role of the opposition is also recognized in dealing with matters at second reading. That's what we want to see happen. That comes under the rubric of making Parliament work.
If we're not here to make Parliament work....
Maybe we're back in the days of Parliament before this government was elected, when making Parliament dysfunctional was the order of the day, when the Conservatives, in opposition, wrote manuals on how to disrupt committees, or when they were first in power and they wanted to disrupt committees to be able to prove that Parliament wasn't working. They were the ones who were ensuring that it didn't work. They were the ones who wrote manuals to pass out to committee members and said, let's go to committees and make them dysfunctional, make sure they don't work, so that we'll have an excuse to call an election, contrary to the fixed election laws. I don't know if people remember that. I wasn't in Parliament at the time. I was at the other end of the country in a different legislature, but we heard all about it, making Parliament not work.
Is that what we have here today? “Let's ignore Parliament. Now we're government again and this time we've got a majority.” Instead of saying, “You know, we can relax, we have a majority, we have four years, we have a job to do and we're going to do it and we're going to work through the parliamentary process, we're going to work with the other parties, we're going to try to persuade them of the rightness of our cause, and we're not going to delay forever, but we have a process to go through, here's our legislation, we're going to defend it, and we're quite happy to defend it, and we'll defend it in Parliament in principle at second reading, and we'll defend it in committee at clause-by-clause study, and we won't be insisting on rushing things through in one day....”
As I said, when they were in opposition, and I think it's important to know...you should be careful what you say in opposition, because one day you might be in government and sometimes your statements come back to haunt you. The current Minister of Immigration, Jason Kenney, said in 2002:
Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to rise I suppose on the bill. I am displeased that the bill represents the 75th time that the government has invoked closure or time allocation since it came to power in 1993, abusing that very significant power to limit and shut down debate in this place more than any other government in Canadian history.
Well, I think that record is being challenged.
This is parliament. Parliament is derived from the French word “parler” which means to speak. It is the place where the representatives of the common people speak to issues that affect the common good. For the government to, for the 75th time, prohibit members from speaking on behalf of their constituents and to the national interest on matters of grave concern, such as the budget implementation bill, is yet more unfortunate evidence of the government's growing arrogance and contempt for our conventions of parliamentary democracy.
Now there's a mouthful, Mr. Chair, “growing arrogance and contempt for our conventions of parliamentary democracy”. What are those conventions? They include an opportunity for a detailed study of a bill clause by clause in committee. That's what committees are for. You don't have the whole House deal with that.
You could almost understand that it sounded rational. I'm sure the public is saying, well, okay, they're limiting debate in the House on principle; it's a complicated bill and people don't necessarily get all the nuances of it in parliamentary debate in the House and speakers only have 20 minutes to speak and 10 minutes for questions and comments, and the bill is so long and complicated, so you only can touch the high points. The government says, look, we're invoking closure because we think this bill should go to committee as soon as possible and get the kind of detailed study this bill needs. So we did that and here we are.
One thing was to hear witnesses, and we heard them—it was a bit rushed and people didn't get to speak very long, but that was what we agreed to—and we heard from quite a number of witnesses, but now we're down to the detailed study. We're now to the clause-by-clause, where the rubber hits the road when it comes to legislation.
The general statement that this is a bill about safer streets and communities...that's sort of what you'd call motherhood, because every justice bill is about that. Every government believes in that and every opposition party believes in having safer streets and communities, so there's no disagreement about that.
Where the disagreement comes is where the rubber hits the road, where the clauses that are put forth in this bill, where the changes that are being made to our criminal law, to our Youth Criminal Justice Act, to the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act Canada, to the State Immunity Act, to the other legislation that's affected by the nine bills that are incorporated here, that's where we need to have respect for the conventions of parliamentary democracy.
As Jason Kenney said in 2002, to “prohibit members from speaking on behalf of their constituents and to the national interest on matters of grave concern is yet more unfortunate evidence of the government's growing evidence and contempt for our conventions of parliamentary democracy.” Well, it seems to me that it is growing.
We had a manual for disruption of committees a few years ago by this same party in power.