House of Commons Hansard #65 of the 36th Parliament, 2nd Session. (The original version is on Parliament's site.) The word of the day was debate.

Topics

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

3:45 p.m.

Reform

Deborah Grey Reform Edmonton North, AB

Mr. Speaker, someone finds it disgusting. Someone finds me disgusting. I guess he is certainly entitled to his opinion. Surely to heaven this thing is bigger than some person's opinion about me.

Regarding the application of rules, we know it has to be to both sides. You were a coach. I just had a kid from Niagara Falls in my office yesterday who was talking about you as a football coach in the glory days. You know also that if kids on your own team mouth off at you or whatever and you do not discipline them, you will have a lousy team and probably a pretty lousy record as well.

Just in terms of personal respect, in my coaching I remember that it is easy to pick on the other side, but the girls on my volleyball team at Dewberry School knew perfectly well that if they did something wrong and Miss Grey said they would go to the showers, they did not mess with it. They knew that was exactly what was going to happen. One cannot favour one side over the other. It does not work.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

3:50 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

Mr. Speaker, I will be using the entire 20 minute period. I am sure members opposite will be delighted to hear that.

This is an interesting debate. In some of the speeches people are positioning themselves in one sense to be great defenders of the democratic process in this place. They are saying that they are not attacking you for partisan reasons to perhaps go at the government in a different way. That is what I have been hearing all day. I find that quite remarkable. It is a subterfuge; that is probably the best way I can think of it.

The motion of non-confidence in the Speaker comes from the party that just lost all its amendments in relation to Bill C-20, the clarity bill, and the fact that it is upset about that is probably why we are even having this debate. Mr. Speaker, instead of debating the issue of the status of health care in the country that the fifth party wanted to put forward today on an opposition day, we have found ourselves through negotiations with the House leaders coming to an agreement that we should somehow put that off for a day and debate this motion and talk about how you are doing your job. To then hear people say that it is not partisan makes me laugh. It is clearly and purely partisan beyond a doubt.

In preparing for this job I sat with some excellent Speakers in the provincial legislature. You will, sir, remember Speaker Edighoffer, a fine gentleman who served the province of Ontario in an exceptional way as Speaker. There was Speaker Warner. Speaker Edighoffer was a member of the Liberal caucus when he was elected and then he became Speaker. Of course one must then withdraw from all those caucus and partisan activities, as one should. Speaker Warner was a member of the New Democratic Party when he was elected under Premier Rae. He too withdrew from caucus participation because no Speaker can be involved in even knowing what the government is thinking in terms of the policies or platforms it is going to put forward.

We expect an awful lot of our Speakers in this place and in the provincial legislatures and so we should. I thought about how I could define what it is that we expect of the Speaker. Rather than reinvent the wheel, I did some homework and came up with something which I thought said it all. In 1986 the then Leader of the Opposition, the Right Hon. John Turner, said:

You know what we demand of you, Mr. Speaker. Perfection! We want fairness, independence, decisiveness, patience, common sense, good humour, upholding the traditions of the House, knowledge of the rules and an intuition for the changing mood and tone of the House as we move through our days.

That is a fair definition of what the House expects of its Speaker.

The other aspect of this is that you, sir, do not make the rules. We do. Through the process that is put in place, the House of Commons sets the rules down. We have a process whereby they are approved by the House of Commons. I know you would agree that in addition to all the issues of fairness, independence, common sense and good humour, that you are in fact a servant of the House of Commons. As a result you have to do a job in as impartial a way as you possibly can and not get caught into any kind of personal partisan feelings that would take away the rights of anyone in a minority position.

The reason I say that is I find it really interesting that members opposite who have spoken here have begun their speeches by saying that the government is heavy handed, that the reason we are having this debate is that we have had too many motions of time allocation and that they do not like the way the government is operating and doing business. Mr. Speaker, what in the world has that to do with you?

I would say it proves to me the point that this is nothing but subterfuge and a way to say that they are mad that they lost a bill, a vote, a motion, 400 amendments or whatever it is. They cannot get at the government any more, and there is an interesting reason for that by the way, so they will attack the Speaker.

One of the Reform members said that the government only got 38% of the vote. When I was elected in 1987 in the David Peterson government that was about the percentage of vote we had in Ontario. When there are five parties it is not the government's fault opposition members cannot get their act together. It is not the government's fault that they do not seem to be able to agree on policies. We have what some refer to as a pizza parliament with five different parties opposite. The standings are that out of 301 seats we have 157 and that is a majority. The next closest party has 58.

I can understand the frustration of the opposition because the mandate was given to us, not by you, Mr. Speaker, not by your office and not by the table officers or the staff. I want to touch on that because not only is this subterfuge of attacking you a way of getting to the government, but what they have actually done by this motion of non-confidence in the Speaker is to attack our staff and our table officers. I find that particularly offensive and absolutely uncalled for.

I must admit I am surprised to see it coming from the Bloc. One of the things I have been impressed with and surprised about in this place is that if we take away the issue of Quebec separatism, the members of the Bloc whom I have worked with on committee are compassionate, caring, hardworking, dedicated members of parliament. In fact I have travelled with some of them to other places in the world. I have not found that they foisted their particular brand of separatism on the people in Strasbourg, France where I attended the Council of Europe. I have found them to be very good MPs who contribute to the process and the work in this place.

The Bloc members in a fit, a temper tantrum, and it can be described as nothing else because they were out of ideas, they were out of tools with which to try to shove wrenches into the machinery of government, said “We cannot get those guys over there, so we had better go after the staff”. How did they do that?

The concern of the member for Rimouski—Mitis was that some 700 motions had been submitted quite properly, although there were two the Bloc claim were never really submitted properly, and they were rejected. There were well over a thousand. We would still be here voting.

I would like somebody in this place, you, Mr. Speaker, or anybody else, to tell me that the Canadian public sent any one of us from any one of the parties her to stand up between 6 o'clock at night and 6 o'clock in the morning and then 6 o'clock in the morning to 6 o'clock at night three days running, 24 hours a day, and have our names called to vote on a motion that would change a comma to a semicolon.

That cannot be called democracy. That can have no basis in governing this land. Lord knows it is difficult enough in your job, Mr. Speaker, to try to govern 301 of us who can be unruly because of the partisanship. This is a blood sport and we all know that. This is a tough business. There is some truth in that old saying “If you can make it here you can make it anywhere”.

You have a job that is really a thankless job. You try to keep order, to keep direction and to find ways to ensure that. It is not to direct anyone, not to direct government, not to direct opposition. Members of this place have more freedom than any institution in the world.

Bloc members have said that their privileges have been violated because their amendments were not accepted. There is something that goes with privileges in this country. It is called responsibilities. Bill C-20 has three clauses and is one and a half pages long. I understand their fervour, their passion, their desire to lead their province out of Confederation. All Canadians understand that. They also understand that is a minority position in the province of Quebec today.

All the polls indicate that the desire for and the interest in separatism are at historic lows, but I understand it probably more than I did three years ago when I arrived in this place. As I said before, I respect them for many of the things they do in an effort to be members of this place. However, I would suggest it is not responsible to submit over 1,000 amendments to a three clause bill that is a page and a half long. Most of them, the vast majority of them, were either redundant or simply not substantive.

Without a doubt that is a clear message which says “we cannot win this so how can we make it as uncomfortable as possible”. I do not know what it costs to run this place. In some ways I find that argument irrelevant. We are sent here and if it costs it costs, but it is just such a waste.

We went through it with the Reform Party that took the same approach to the Nisga'a treaty. I understood its passion. It is not your fault, Mr. Speaker, that Reformers had 471 amendments and it is not your fault that they lost them all. Lord knows I have never been terribly supportive of the policies of the Reform Party, but I did not see Reformers pull a tantrum and file a motion of non-confidence in the Speaker just because they lost the 471 amendments. They took their lumps. They went home to western Canada, British Columbia, or wherever they are from, and fought the battle at the local level.

That is what democracy in this place is about. This is an abuse in my view. It is an abuse of you, Sir. It is an abuse of your deputies. It is an abuse of the staff.

There are three types of members in this place. Members opposite might find this hard to believe, but I am actually not a government member in those terms. I am a member in support of the government. There is a difference. Government members are the cabinet. The Prime Minister and his cabinet are indeed the government. The rest of us who were elected as Liberals choose whether or not to be in support of the government. That is the role we play.

We hear members opposite calling for free votes for people in this place, that there are not enough free votes. I have never been involved with a government where there is more opportunity for free votes, more opportunity within the caucus system and within the committee system to make changes.

The democratic process around here frankly is quite remarkable. I say that from the backbenches where some would say on a clear day I might have trouble seeing the Speaker. The reality is that the process is in place for members, and I might add it is in place for members opposite to have input.

It is just past 4 o'clock. I am told that at 3.30 p.m. today a press conference was held in this precinct where the critic for citizenship and immigration released a yet to be finalized and yet to be approved report of the citizenship and immigration committee on the immigration and illegal migrant issue.

I find that incomprehensible and despicable. It shows a lack of respect in you, Sir; a lack of respect in the committee; a lack of respect in the traditions of this place, of every person who has gone before us in this place. He is simply saying he does not like this report. Do you know why? It is because he never showed up at the meetings to help us write it. He released it and accused the committee of not listening to him. It is fundamentally wrong and childish. Yet that is happening.

I hear members stand in their places to talk to you about this issue. They say that things have deteriorated around here. It is quite interesting. We have members in opposition. We have members in support of the government and we have members who are the government. It has always been thus. We all have a role to play.

I served for five years in opposition to what I thought was an arrogant government. I thought it was a government that was not listening, that got in by accident. It was the New Democratic government that was in Ontario for five years. I can remember thinking that if the people had a chance to vote again the morning after the election they would never have put those guys in power. They did not believe that was going to happen.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:05 p.m.

NDP

Lorne Nystrom NDP Qu'Appelle, SK

Respect the people.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:05 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

That is a fair comment. I would throw that one right back over there: respect the people. We hear members saying that we only have 38% of the vote. We have 157 of the 301 seats. Whether or not the member likes it, it is called a majority. Whether one uses old math or new math it is called a majority and we are the government. It is not about saying we are the government and we will do what we want. It is about saying we are the government and we have—

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:05 p.m.

Bloc

Odina Desrochers Bloc Lotbinière, QC

You are so stupid.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:05 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

That is a wonderful comment. We have a member over there who called a minister of the crown girl yesterday and today called a minister of the crown honey. Now we have a member over there shouting that I am stupid. I suppose many of my teachers would have agreed with that assessment. My mother and dad at times certainly would have agreed with that assessment. My wife who is in the gallery would agree with that assessment on an ongoing basis.

Is that what we are down to? Is that the quality of debate in this place: “You are stupid?” What is going on here? Members will know that there are few in this place who get more passionately partisan than I at times.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:05 p.m.

Bloc

Stéphane Bergeron Bloc Verchères, QC

Is it possible?

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:05 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

It is not probably possible, but I would like to think, whether I am here or on that side of the House, that I respect this institution and that I respect the rules.

We know the difference and the reason we do not have brawls, although we have come close on a couple of occasions. The distance between the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition is the distance between two people holding swords with the tips barely touching. Why is that? The symbolism of that for me says it all about Canada. We do not kill one another. Our weapons are our minds. Unfortunately some of the weapons are a little less sharp than others. Our weapons are our minds. Our ammunition is our words. That is why it gets so heated in here. That is why we get so partisan in here. That is how we do battle. That is how we fight on behalf of the people who sent us here to represent them.

I received an e-mail the other day in my office from a constituent I have never met who referred to a recent newspaper article in which there were some rather unfair criticisms of my style and so on. The e-mail said “I do not agree with that reporter. I want my MP to be heard. You keep it up”. I will keep it up. There is no doubt about that.

This is a most reprehensible attack on you, Sir. It is a reprehensible attack on the table officers, on the staff and on the very institution that we would all die for. We know that. Many have died for it. We celebrate our veterans when we bring them here. We will continue to fight to uphold that democratic principle.

If members do not like what they see they should not attack the Speaker. They are trying to shoot the messenger who is just doing a job. If they want to attack us that is fair ball and we will give it right back.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:10 p.m.

Reform

Jay Hill Reform Prince George—Peace River, BC

Mr. Speaker, obviously I cannot do justice to rebutting a 20 minute diatribe with one minute but I will take a quick run at it.

The hon. member for Mississauga West chastized opposition members for calling other members names such as girl or something along those lines. Yet I note that he resorted to calling one of my colleagues childish, reprehensible, despicable, and words like that. I throw this right back at him.

He said that the motion the Bloc Quebecois put forward attacks the staff and table officers. That is not how I read the motion. Where in the motion does it say anything negative about the clerks and table officers for whom I have the utmost respect?

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:10 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

Mr. Speaker, I would like to answer the member because I think he has made a good point. In the point of privilege the member for Rimouski—Mitis said the deputy principal clerk sent a letter to the office, et cetera. Her concern, as I understand it, was that 700 motions had been rejected. Two of them had never been officially submitted.

Also, as I understand it, the staff were working from their data base because they had worked with the member opposite to prepare these amendments. With 700 amendments on their data base, they did not go through them line by line and check them all off. Two of them were not included in the total number submitted. I think they probably made a mistake, but does that justify an attack on them? Surely not.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:10 p.m.

Bloc

René Laurin Bloc Joliette, QC

Mr. Speaker, the hon. member for Mississauga West speaks of respect for our institutions and the public as if he were the embodiment of respect. But what could be more disrespectful than to stop people from expressing their views?

Unable to speak in the House, what else could Bloc members do besides taking action and creating situations to alert the public and the people who were being denied the right to speak through their representatives in the House?

We voted for 40 hours. With 40 hours more, the committee could have heard another 40 witnesses.

This is what the Liberals did not want to hear. The Liberal Party wanted to use our institutions, and even the Chair at times, to justify its action.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

Mr. Speaker, I suppose if we had another 80 hours we could have heard more witnesses.

How long do these members want to continue to debate the issue of sovereignty? I can tell them that people in my riding and I think people in the rest of Canada, including many people in Quebec, are simply fed up with it. The bill put some clarity forward. Who can argue against that? Who can argue against a question, in all honesty, that simply asks: Do you or do you not want to separate from Canada?

There were three paragraphs in the bill. The legislation consisted of a page and a half. Do we need 1,000 amendments to clarify it, or is that not, very clearly, simply an attempt by the Bloc Quebecois to put a wrench into the machinery of government?

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Progressive Conservative

Rick Borotsik Progressive Conservative Brandon—Souris, MB

Mr. Speaker, I will try to bring the debate back to the issue.

There have been some newspaper reports recently which have suggested that the member for Mississauga West does not have any substance in his speeches. I say unequivocally and on the record that there was a smidgen of substance in the member's speech.

Personally I have respect not only for the Chair, not only for the office, but for you personally, Mr. Speaker. I can say that unequivocally as I stand here today. I would hold that very dear and true to my party.

Mr. Speaker, you have a job that is almost impossible to do. You have a job that takes the wisdom of Solomon. Obviously you will have some difficulties in trying to satisfy each and every member of the House. I want you to know, Mr. Speaker, that you have the respect of our party.

I believe the member tried to put a partisanship twist on what we, the Progressive Conservatives, did by giving up our supply day so this motion could be debated. I would like some clarification because, quite frankly, we gave our day so that this motion could be debated. We did it because we felt it was necessary that this motion get out of the way, and I would like—

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

The Speaker

The hon. member for Mississauga West.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

Mr. Speaker, the member opposite will be happy to know that my quarrel in this instance is not with the fifth party. My concern is the abuse of the system because the Bloc failed to derail the legislation.

I do not disrespect Bloc members for disagreeing with the bill. That is their right as elected parliamentarians. But once we lose in this place, we lose. That is the way it works. That is reality. They cannot turn around and say, we lost, we cannot get the government to change, so we will attack the Speaker. That is wrong.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Progressive Conservative

Rick Borotsik Progressive Conservative Brandon—Souris, MB

Answer the question.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

I have answered it. My problem is not with the member for Brandon—Souris. He should take a Valium and relax.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Liberal

John Bryden Liberal Wentworth—Burlington, ON

Mr. Speaker, I have a comment for the benefit of the member for Mississauga West, who was not in the House at the time of your decision on the flags on the desks, which was raised by the member for Edmonton North—

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

Yes, I was.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:15 p.m.

Liberal

John Bryden Liberal Wentworth—Burlington, ON

Anyway, it was raised by the member for Edmonton North as an example of why the House should not have confidence in you as the result of the decision on that occasion.

I want to remind Canadians of what happened on that particular occasion when you ruled against having flags on our desks. I remember vividly the member for Medicine Hat throwing the flag on the floor of this Chamber. That flag lay on the floor of this Chamber, on the rug with people walking around it, for some time afterward.

I remember thinking to myself, Mr. Speaker, how wise your decision was. The reason we do not have flags on our desks is because it encourages us to use the symbol of our country for partisan reasons. It was a very good decision.

Further to that, I realize that party, not the Bloc Quebecois because I appreciate it moving this motion in protest and it has a right to do that, but the Reform Party constantly confuses attacking the government with attacking parliament. The decision with the flag was a case where the Reform Party was attacking parliament. Again we hear the Reform Party attacking you, Mr. Speaker, when it really means that it wants to attack the government. It is dissatisfied with the government, but constantly it confuses it, and it is such a shame.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:20 p.m.

Liberal

Steve Mahoney Liberal Mississauga West, ON

Mr. Speaker, I want to thank the fifth party for agreeing to give up its opposition day today so that we could debate this motion. If that settles the member down and reduces his blood pressure, I am happy to contribute.

The member referred to the flag debate. I was in this place. It was at the beginning of this parliament.

We hear people talking about decorum in this place. Let us take a look at what has happened.

I remember a member of the Bloc picking up his chair and walking out of this place. He took it to his riding. That is real decorum, that is. We have the young people stealing the furniture for goodness sake.

I remember members opposite wearing Mexican sombreros and doing hat dances outside. I do not know what they were protesting.

People painted a car with a Canadian flag and drove it all around Parliament Hill.

These are parliamentarians. I think that Canadians are a bit embarrassed. They become embarrassed with the kind of nonsense they see in this place. I think it is a shame that the Bloc wants to take it out on you, sir.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:20 p.m.

Bloc

Stéphane Bergeron Bloc Verchères, QC

Mr. Speaker, during such a serious debate, one of such grave importance, I was surprised to hear language befitting back street brawls.

I was also surprised to hear, in this House, statements that trivialized, minimized, and ran down the approach the Bloc Quebecois has undertaken today.

Before I get to the heart of the issue, I would like to make a brief aside. I heard the member for Mississauga West say that his constituents are fed up with this issue, that they do not want to hear one more word about the Constitution and Quebec's place within or outside Canada.

Very few countries in the world can say that one of their original constituents, a province, a founding nation was and still is excluded from a constitutional reform, which, in this case, took place in 1982. Few countries in the world can boast of such a sorry record, a sorry performance: deliberately excluding from and keeping out of their Constitution an entire people, a founding people of this country, a founding province of the Canadian federation.

That being said, I want to go back to the heart of the debate. This morning, I heard an hon. member say “Mr. Speaker, we are here to determine whether or not you should lose your job”. As if the only thing at stake here was the job of one individual, namely yourself, Mr. Speaker, as the Speaker of the House of Commons.

We have heard that it is the responsibility of the Speaker of the House to take decisions and the responsibility of members to abide by those decisions. During the course of almost seven years that we have been sitting here in this House, Mr. Speaker, you have made decisions that were sometimes in our favour, and sometimes not.

We have always accepted your decisions, as it is our duty to do, because we have always had great confidence in you and in the institution that you represent as the Speaker of the House of Commons.

Some members, like the hon. member for Mississauga—West, have tried to make a direct connection between this motion of non-confidence in the Speaker and Bill C-20. I think that the leader of the Bloc Quebecois has clearly stated—obviously the hon. member for Mississauga—West was not listening when he made his speech this morning and therefore did not hear this—that no such connection can be made between Bill C-20 and the non-confidence motion we are currently debating, because, had you ruled that there was a prima facie case of privilege with respect to the amendments—I will come back to that later—and had consequently heard or allowed the hon. member for Rimouski—Mitis to move her motion, the issue would now be before the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs.

Long before Bill C-20 was passed, this issue could have been referred to the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs, and today we would not be debating this motion of non-confidence in the Speaker. Therefore those who see things in a negative way and try to imply there is a link between this non-confidence motion and debate on Bill C-20 are mistaken.

What we are referring to is the fact that the Bloc Quebecois prepared a number of amendments, with the help of legislative counsel, in preparation for the report stage, gave rise to this interpretation, because some seemed to think that it was way too many amendments for a bill with only three clauses.

This is not just a bill containing three clauses, it is a bill that goes to the heart of democracy in Quebec, that deals with the very existence of Quebec whether inside or outside Canada, or even with the future of any other province since the government wants us to believe it applies to all the Canadian provinces, and involves the future of any province either inside or outside Canada.

It is not just a bill with three clauses; it is a fundamental bill, probably one of the most fundamental bills we will have had to vote on in this House. Yet the government rammed it through the House, rushing through every stage. Not one stage was disposed of in a normal and reasonable length of time. We rushed through every single one of them.

Closure was imposed at second reading. They wanted to impose closure in committee to limit work. Since they were not able to do so, they imposed closure in the House, at report stage and at third reading. Double closure was imposed.

As I was going to say, it just happened that for this bill we drafted a number of amendments with the help of legislative counsel and we moved a number of those amendments. Surprisingly, we realized that two of the amendments drafted with legislative counsel yet never moved had been ruled out of order. What a shock.

There was a second surprise: a number of other amendments that we had moved were ruled out of order based upon technical criteria. For example, the bill referred to secession, so the word sovereignty was beyond its scope. We went back to work and replaced the word sovereignty by the word secession just to please the Liberal government and, surprise, surprise, these amendments were again rejected.

Members will understand that we wondered about the impartiality with which we were treated with during the whole process. We wondered about the confidentiality that must exist between the members of parliament and legislative counsel. We thought that it was so important that we raised a question of privilege. Why? Because we were convinced that there had been a breach of confidentiality.

We learned that this administrative change had been made about three years ago by the officers of the House. As a member of the House, I had not been made aware of that. Moreover, I am also a member of the Board of Internal Economy, and even though I do not usually miss a lot of board meetings, I never heard about the fact that this client-lawyer privileged relationship, this relationship of confidentiality between legislative counsel and members, had been changed, that someone somewhere had decided that legislative counsel would be required to share their knowledge of amendments with the clerks.

I must tell you that this is hard to swallow because it shows that there is a double standard in the House. When the government puts amendments on the Order Paper, does it submit them to the clerks beforehand? Of course not. Why then should the amendments prepared by members of the House with the legislative counsel be shared with the clerks? Why has the client-lawyer type relationship of confidentiality between members and legislative counsel been broken? We do not know.

What we do know, however, is that when we raised this question of privilege in the House, the Chair considered it. You then said, and I will quote you directly:

I am unable to find that this constitutes a prima facie question of privilege or a contempt of the House.

You continued by saying:

Hon. members should understand that House legislative counsel do not work in isolation. There is no separate database for legislative counsel as the hon. member suggests. The legislative database supports the work of all persons having duties within the field of legislative support operations.

I revert to my question. How is it that the government can put amendments in the Notice Paper without having to share the knowledge of these amendments with the clerks? I wonder how things worked here before this administrative change, which, as a member of parliament and a member of the Board of Internal Economy, I had never heard about, except a few days before all these incidents occurred, was implemented and even before—to go further—computers began to be used in the House, even before legislative counsel could put draft amendments into databases.

Am I to understand from your ruling that, at one time, clerks would sneak into the legislative counsel's offices, open their filing cabinet, go through their files to see what they contained, which amendments had been prepared, for whom and for what purpose?

It seems to me that, except for the desire to speed up their work and make it easier during the night after we submitted our amendments, nothing can justify that a clerk should consult the legislative counsel's databank to avoid inputting all the information once more, reprint and reformat everything, to make an end of it. That's it, that's all.

This certainly makes the work of the clerks easier, but in the past, when everything had to be done manually, how far did the clerks go to make their work easier? Did they go as far as to search through the legislative counsel's filing cabinets?

I am told that this change was made just three years ago. Therefore, you cannot suggest that it has always been done in the past.

When something as fundamental as the trust that should exist between each hon. member and a legislative counsel is breached, there is something more important, more serious, and with more far-reaching consequences at stake than a simple decision by the Chair with which we should comply.

Through your decision, you have somehow validated a practice, and that prompted us to raise the question of privilege. Mr. Speaker, for reasons I have a hard time understanding, you have decided that there was not a prima facie case that the privileges of members of Parliament had been breached, when we were deeply convinced that there was a case.

We thought we had clearly demonstrated that the trust, the confidentiality that must exist in the relationship between the hon. members and the legislative counsels, had been breached. Instead, in your ruling, a ruling that really shocked us, for the reasons I mentioned earlier, you validated this new administrative process.

If we cannot be sure anymore that the work we do with the legislative counsels will not be used for other purposes, surely you can understand that we seriously question the system. We are questioning it because we are there are other bills before the House, and we are working on a number of amendments regarding them.

We have heard the government House leader make a statement to the effect that, in light of what was happening with Bill C-20 and with Bill C-3 coming up for consideration, the government better take action. That is why he introduced his infamous Motion No. 8. Forced to backtrack on that motion, he has now placed Motion No. 9 on the Order Paper. He is taking precautions, in anticipation of what will happen with Bill C-3.

How can the government House leader claim to know what is going to happen?

Considering the events of the last days and weeks, the situation with the two amendments of the Bloc and also what happened with the other amendments declared out of order after we changed them, you will understand that it was rather disturbing to hear the government House leader say that he knew what was coming.

How can he know that? How could he know what was coming unless someone somewhere informed him?

The relationship of trust has been breached. Mr. Speaker, the ruling you made on the question of privilege by my colleague from Rimouski—Mitis is not just a ruling like any other. I want to tell you right away that the leader of the Bloc Quebecois was heart broken at having to move a motion of non-confidence in the Speaker.

You know me well enough to know that I have profound respect for you and your office. You know that I respect you and your office. You also know that, if we are debating this motion today it is not, contrary to what the hon. member for Mississauga West said so outrageously, to satisfy some political agenda. That is not the object of the exercise.

It is unworthy of the hon. member to try to reduce what is now happening to a single manoeuvre or ploy by the Bloc Quebecois because we are exasperated by our failure to defeat Bill C-20. That is not what we are doing today.

There is a saying that if wishes were horses, then beggars would ride. I repeat that if you had simply allowed my hon. colleague from Rimouski—Mitis to move her motion, allowed it to be debated, we would have long ago stopped talking about this question, except in the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs where it would have been considered. This matter deserves due consideration. When you decided not to accept it, you brushed it off, and a fundamental relationship, a relationship of trust was definitively breached.

It might not be too late, but I want you to know that, contrary to what some might say, now it is not a question of whether we want to get rid of you or not. Because of the ruling, because of what has taken place, something very alarming, I am concerned by what the leader of the government said. He said “We knew what was coming”. But how can he know what is coming? You see, the relationship of trust has been breached.

We did not have any other choice, and I must tell you that we were heartbroken to have to introduce this non-confidence motion. I would like to think that before the end of the day, something will happen that will allow us not to vote on it, otherwise my colleagues and myself will have no choice but to stand up in this House and vote for this motion. It would be a very hard thing to do, but there would be no other choice.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:40 p.m.

Liberal

Dennis Mills Liberal Broadview—Greenwood, ON

Mr. Speaker, I have had the privilege of serving in the House for three terms. I have always thought that this was one of the greatest honours and privileges of my life.

I have always considered this was the nation's boardroom, the boardroom of Canada. This is the chamber where we come together to build a better Canada. Mr. Speaker, you are the chairman of this board. This is not the Prime Minister's chamber. This is not the chamber of the Liberal Party or the chamber of the Bloc Quebecois. This is the chamber of Canada.

In the last six years something different has happened in this Chamber. Through the democratic process duly elected members from the province of Quebec have come here to say they are not here to build Canada but to begin a separate country called Quebec. There have been times when I found it very difficult to deal with this situation, but I have always tried to the best of my ability to work with members of the Bloc Quebecois on certain social issues where I felt we were together and on which I think they have done a great job on behalf of all of Canada.

Last week during debate on Bill C-20 the Bloc Quebecois put forward 1,000 amendments.

Had you not been fair, Mr. Speaker, you would have ruled many of them out of order. You made this entire chamber of Canada submit to the right of those members of parliament to put all their motions through. In summary, I want to say that action ratified your fairness in this Chamber and I continue to support you.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:45 p.m.

Bloc

Stéphane Bergeron Bloc Verchères, QC

Mr. Speaker, I would like to say two things about what my hon. colleague said. First, I think it is not totally accurate and correct to say that members of the Bloc Quebecois are not here to build a better Canada. Of course, we are here to promote the sovereignty of Quebec. This is our main goal. But we are also here to defend the interests of Quebecers within Canada until Quebec becomes a sovereign country.

We never thought that our role was to make Canada a less attractive country, because we wish to maintain very close ties with the rest of Canada. Besides, it is not in our interest to make Canada a less attractive country or to portray it as such.

That being said, with regard to the issue raised by our colleague, I believe he is getting things mixed up when he says that you showed your sense of fairness and justice by accepting a certain number of amendments, namely the 300 amendment proposals to Bill C-20 moved by the Bloc Quebecois. How could you have rejected those amendments? What right would you have had to refuse amendments that were acceptable and in order, simply because they had been moved by the Bloc Quebecois? Could you have refused them for this reason alone?

I am not referring here to the amendments that you duly accepted, despite the very subjective and partisan evaluations made by certain people across the way. I am not referring to that. I am referring to amendments that were refused without even having even been moved, and to amendments which were refused after having been changed on the recommendation of the same people who had refused them and which were nevertheless ruled out of order.

Now, if the hon. member cannot understand that, maybe he should listen instead of shouting.

House Of CommonsOral Question Period

4:45 p.m.

Reform

Garry Breitkreuz Reform Yorkton—Melville, SK

Mr. Speaker, I have listened very carefully to the intervention from my Bloc colleague. I must say I disagree with a lot of the interventions from this side of the House, but I agree with what he has said and I will probably support him in the vote. This is not a partisan issue. I believe that we have to look at it as such because the Speaker of the House—