Libby Davies slams Harper over prorogation
FEDERAL POLITICS / NDP House leader says PM is dodging accountability
Dale Smith / National / Tuesday, January 05, 2010
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HARPER 'NEEDS TO LIVE WITH THE CONSEQUENCES.' MP Libby Davies says the NDP won't support a Tory attempt to bring back bills that died when Harper prorogued Parliament.
As the NDP House leader, lesbian MP Libby Davies is in charge of her party's day-to-day business in the Commons.

The trouble is, it's difficult to do that job when you're effectively shut out of work for two months.

On Dec 30, Prime Minister Stephen Harper phoned the Governor General to request prorogation — ending the current session of Parliament — with an eye to a new throne speech on Mar 3 and a budget speech the following day.

Prorogation normally happens at the end of a government's legislative agenda, when they're ready to take stock and come up with a new agenda — hence a new throne speech. But this is the third time that Harper has called for a prorogation in the middle of a legislative agenda.

"Under prorogation, everything on the Order Paper, everything that's in the House is gone," says Davies.

"Private members' business still survives — that's traditionally been the case," Davies adds. "But all government bills, whatever's in committee, whatever's being debated, what's in the Senate, what's still in process — it's gone."

The biggest irony, according to Davies, is that the government has been accusing the opposition parties of holding up its tough-on-crime legislation, and yet this is the third prorogation that Harper has called.

"Some of these bills that he claims are so critical and important to their political agenda — he's actually eliminating his own legislative agenda," Davies says.

One of the other unusual features of this prorogation is the length of time that it spans.


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"We have to ask the question: What has [Harper] got to hide?" Davies says. "The fact that he took this unilateral action in December, a full month before the House was due to come back, clearly shuts down any committees meeting. Clearly they're trying to avoid any scrutiny and accountability on the whole question of Canada's involvement in the war in Afghanistan, and possibly other issues, but I would say that's a key one."

When the House is simply in recess, committees can still meet, as the Afghanistan committee has been. With Parliament prorogued, those committees cease to exist and can no longer meet. It also means that committee work, such as the study on Section 13 (hate speech provisions) of the Canadian Human Rights Act, dissolves until the committees can be reformed and decide whether or not to resurrect it.

Davies wonders what the government didn't want to come out before or during the Olympics, when the world's media will be in Vancouver.

"The official reason from the PMO was they wanted to take time to think about how they're going to deal with the economic recovery," Davies says. "Well for god's sake, they've had a year to start thinking about this, and all the more reason why Parliament should be in session, to engage in that process. The whole thing is so suspicious and so rooted in his own political agenda of trying to avoid public accountability on the Afghanistan issue and not wanting to face the music, so to speak."

As for the loss of the legislative agenda, there are ways that a government can return all bills to the Order Paper in the same place they were before they were dissolved, but that requires consent of all parties, and the NDP isn't willing to give it — especially when they're happy to see certain pieces of legislation die, such as the Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement and several crime bills.

"He made this decision, he needs to live with the consequences," Davies says.

Private members' business remains unaffected, as does the order of precedence by which it was called. Davies' own private members' bill on a national housing strategy will therefore remain at third reading, while Bill Siksay's bill on trans rights should still be up for debate soon after Parliament resumes.

As for what happens next, Davies says that her party will discuss the matter at their caucus retreat at the end of the month.

"We've got to be more creative, we've got to think about how do we bring forward the public agenda... because clearly we're not going to let Stephen Harper off the hook, and we will continue to be as effective an opposition as we can be, even though he's denied us the opportunity to go and work in Ottawa."

Dale Smith is Xtra's federal politics reporter. He blogs every weekday on Xtra.ca — check out
Hill Queeries.



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Reader Comments


 
Harper's incredible hypocrisy cries out
Good work Libby--hold their feet to the fire. Wish JAck was here rather than Fiji.. And wish the Prostitution decriminalization you supported fervently had gone ahead. Here is a letter I wrote to the Globe & Mail this week re Harper's shameless & hypocritical approach to crime: i was supposed to testify along with other organized crime specialists/"experts"before a special Parliamentary committtee of MP's on crime & Justice (allegedly urgent changes required to fight organized crime) in late January (postponed from Dec 1 because of pressing Parliamentary business) but now Harper has closed down Parliament and all committees until March--there are no emergencies any more in this country and all legislation in the works dies, including harper's many tough on crime laws which took a year to get this far (but many don't work anyway and are cosmetic) . So much for Harper's lame "war" on crime. Just a tad of Conservative hypocrisy revealed? (Of course there are no pressing need to change laws as statistics show that violent crime is actually down and the best solution to curbing violent organized crime is for North America as even the Economist has said is to legalize pot and other soft drugs so much in demand on the street. in Canada and the US. sincerely..james r dubro, toronto, longtime crime writer and analyst
james Dubro, toronto ontario
01/06/10 9:07 AM EST
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Libby who? Beans?
No one cares what the NDP thinks about anything. The left is dead in Canada.
ron, vancouver bc
01/06/10 11:58 PM EST
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Left is NOT dead but the Majority!
The left is not dead, Indeed t is the majority if you count the Liberals, the NDP, the Greens and the Bloq (very left). In any case NO One supports the proroguing except die hard conservatives (and not even some of them since valued Legislation died--such as "tough on crime" stuff). Libby is right on....and a damn decent, honest politician.
james Dubro, toronto ontario
01/07/10 8:50 AM EST
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Thanks for nothing.
ron, I disagree with you that the left is dead in Canada, and I for one do care what the N.D.P. thinks.
Trevor Taylor, Abbotsford BC
01/08/10 2:25 PM EST
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What's to become of Bill C-384?
"On February 2nd 2010 our House of Parliament will be debating a bill which was first quietly introduced to the Floor of the Commons by Francine Lalonde in May 2009.The bill is referred to as C-384 and seeks to legalize assisted suicide in Canada.The actual vote is scheduled to take place on the following day. What is perhaps most disconcerting about this bill is the relative disinterest Canadians have shown toward it.Even more disconcerting is the stunning silence on the part of the Anglican Church of Canada--its bishops and its governing bodies.this is non-negotiable for Christians.Assisted suicide,euthanasia,or any other action which usurps the roe of god to determine our final day must be identified and rejected as murder-in direct opposition to God's lving plan for human lives" the article continues Editorial of the Anglican Planet January 2010 issue. Contrary to their opinion I am in favour of euthanizia as a humanizing ethically responsible way of dealing with suffering. i don't know about God's plan call it life or fate or destiny.I don't really consider assisted suicide as "murder" the way conservative Christians would like us to think.
Peter Iveson, Toronto Ontario
01/08/10 2:59 PM EST
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Private members' bills
Peter, as a private member's bill, that will survive the prorogation and be debated when Parliament resumes -- as will Bill C-389, Bill Siksay's bill on equal protection for trans people.
Matt, Verdun QC
01/08/10 4:11 PM EST
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Left is Alive and Well, Ron!
to Ron in Vancouver.....what Canada do you live in? what makes you think you can speak for all?? Ron, the left is alive, well, and growing. you are very inaccurate in your statement that the left is dead. your brain may be, but the left is growing very strong because of the dictator that we have in the PMO. THOUSANDS of Canadians care what the NDP and other left parties say. The NDP is still the official conscience of Parliament. Ron, when you blurt out stupidity like you did, people will think you're stupid......
Darryl, Regina Saskatchewan
01/10/10 12:19 PM EST
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