Parliament: who needs it?

COYNE: Harper’s put the government on a two-month hiatus, but would three months be any worse? Or four? Or six?

by Andrew Coyne on Sunday, January 10, 2010 5:36pm - 94 Comments

Government sources say they are contemplating formally shutting down Parliament at the end of every year, so the government can start afresh with a Throne Speech and a budget.— CP

Every now and then comes a moment of startling clarity, when the brain shakes off the cobwebs and you see things, as it were, for the first time. The Conservatives’ prorogation of Parliament is one of those moments.

Coming at a time when the government was under parliamentary subpoena to produce the documents it was withholding in the Afghan detainee affair, the decision to disband Parliament yet again—a second time in the space of a year, the third in 15 months—was at first unsettling, a case (so it seemed) of a government attempting to evade democratic scrutiny by suppressing the one institution empowered to hold it to account. But the news that the government now plans to make prorogation an annual event casts this in rather a different light.

In their usual bracing, unsentimental way, the Tories are simply confirming a fact that many of us have attempted to deny until now: Parliament does not matter. Once it may have acted as a check on the executive, in the days when it was a genuine legislative body, whose members debated bills, questioned ministers, and represented their constituents in votes of the House. But it has not performed that role for many years—decades, in fact—and it is useless to pretend that it has.

Parliament has become a kind of vestigial ornament, like the monarchy, beloved of nostalgists but quite without any practical purpose. There hasn’t been a mind changed or a vote swayed by a parliamentary debate in 60 years. Question period is, by common consent, a national embarrassment, kept on only to provide employment for the parliamentary press gallery. The House still makes a show of voting, but it’s a pantomime, and everybody knows it. The only votes that really count are those of the party leaders.

So Parliament will be dark the next two months. Can anyone say they will miss it? Will we even notice? The government will carry on as usual. So will the opposition, holding press conferences and staging photo ops and the rest of the real business of politics, for which the House of Commons long ago ceased to be the venue. It might seem a bit shocking just now, with the media beating their drums about it. But after it has become routine, the same schedule observed year after year, will it still seem all that outrageous? It’s a two-month hiatus now, but would three months be any worse? Or four? Or six?

Indeed, as long as we are discarding the pretense that Parliament matters, would it not make more sense—I grant this will strike some as controversial—to shut it down altogether? This country has a lot of important decisions to make: about the economy, the Afghanistan mission, global warming, you name it. Can we afford to spend hundreds of millions of dollars every year, distracting ministers from their responsibilities and taking up untold numbers of bureaucratic man-hours, all to preserve an illusion—that we are still a parliamentary democracy, in the centuries-old tradition of Westminster? Adults grow out of their illusions.

Before anyone gets too alarmed: I’m not talking about doing away with elections. Canada would still be a democracy, even without a sitting Parliament. But rather than engage in the charade of voting for individual candidates, we would vote directly for the party. The party that won the most votes would form the government. Which is what happens now, in reality.

To be sure, that might mean a party could win power with the support of less than half the voters. But again, how is that different than what happens now? In the present state of perpetual brinksmanship and uncertainty, it is hard for governments to plan for the long term or tackle tough problems like the deficit. Freed from the tyranny of Parliament, we should at last have the “majority” government everybody craves.

The good work that MPs do in their constituencies, forwarding immigration letters and the like, could be carried on by party officials. Indeed, they would have more time to devote to it, without having to do the trained-seal routine in Ottawa. And while MPs have an important role to play at present, lobbying ministers for infrastructure spending, that only benefits those ridings clever enough to elect a member of the governing party. How much better if there were someone appointed in every riding to do the job?

Most of the changes needed to bring this about would not require legislation; those that did should not prove too troublesome, on past form, for MPs to digest, though they might require a whipped vote. The one real obstacle to abolition is found in the Charter of Rights: “There shall be a sitting of Parliament and of each legislature at least once every twelve months.” Very well. Recall Parliament once a year for the Throne Speech—a glittering state occasion, full of pomp, reminding everyone of past glories. Then send them home the next day. Or in the quaint parlance of a dying age, prorogue.

You see how easy it would be?

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  • http://yappadingding.blogspot.com/ Yappa

    If we didn't have a sitting parliament, then it would be vital that the majority of MPs formed the government. In situations where no party got the majority of seats, the parties would have to work together to form a coalition. A minority government would be allowed only in very rare circumstances, and when approved by the majority of MPs.

  • http://yappadingding.blogspot.com/ Yappa

    Check out this list of links to information documenting Harper's assault on democracy:

    http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?topic=13108&amp…

  • David

    I think it’s time we gave Canadians the power to vote on issues that our MP’s vote on today. Why do we need to vote via MPs when we have the electronic capabilities to decide matter ourselves now. Why should members of the house vote on the budget in a confidence vote when members of the entire country could do it with a flick of their Iphones

    These incompetent clowns have way too much power and it is time they gave some back

  • The Big JC

    An idea so crazy, it just might work!

    Many readers have rightfully noted that Coyne is being ironic, but who is to say we can't completely revamp our government structure?

    About 10% of me wonders if Harper isn't actually brilliantly revealing this to us with his party's antics: He's long been a proponent of smaller government.

    But then the other 90% reminds me that Stevie is likely just fighting to keep his tidy haircut above water.

  • vote indepenent

    To quote Andrew: To be sure, that might mean a party could win power with the support of less than half the voters. But again, how is that different than what happens now? In the present state of perpetual brinksmanship and uncertainty, it is hard for governments to plan for the long term or tackle tough problems like the deficit. Freed from the tyranny of Parliament, we should at last have the “majority” government everybody craves.

    While you make a sound argument for not having Parliament sit for as long as it currently has or not having a Parliament at all, I think more than not having a Parliament we would be much better served not having political parties. Why have a party if only the leaders vote counts? Why not have just that one person and have them represent just their constituents?

    It is partisanship that is ruining our democracy and taking away our ability to do the best things for this country. Globalization and corporate rule has taken the meaning out of country. It has made it easy for people to not care about Canada because corporate rule does not care about citizenship nor the value of life and country. Corporate rule cares only for the bottom line and this kind of continual erosion of our country’s borders and our human values is finally taking a toll. This really is a perfect time for a revolution and we have the capacity to make a peaceful one. Lets do it!

  • Martin Silva

    Coyne: Why not burn the place down? The germans did it in the 30's!!!!

  • LindaQuebec

    I was completely outraged when I read Andrew's editorial! Let's hope he was just being obnoxious/satirical/ or just making a "Modest Proposal".
    After seeing all the like-minded comments,I won't repeat already stated comments.
    The main reason for the apparent malfunctioning of Parliament is Andrew's favourite person – Stephen Harper. As PM in a minority parliament only money bills(budget) are bills of "confidence". Other bills are either passed or defeated. The defeated bills do not provoke an election, but are either referred back to committee or are dropped from the order paper.
    If Harper needs any lessons in this he can just look at Pearson's record during his minority governments. We got a lot done during that time – health care and the flag to name just a few.
    I can understand Andrew Coyne being partisan but that's no excuse for being blind. His analysis can no longer be taken seriously.

  • Chris K Friesen

    I was only a few sentences in when I was thinking "Jonathan Swift!" It worries me that so many people who (presumably) read this didn't get it. How's our education system doin these days eh.

  • Chris K Friesen

    F U, telling me that my name "is too long or too short"! What kind of B S is that?! Why can't my name be Chris Kelland Friesen?? Am I inconveniencing someone with my name?

  • Wolf

    If we do not need parliament, do we need government?
    Democracy is messy! It is more messy when you are in a minority, since you need other parties to agree with you at least on budget measures. For a government which is right-wing this presents a problem: your agenda is being modified.

    I have no issue with proroguing if all legislation has moved though the channels to completion and issues of natonal interest(our handling of detainees, EI, Haiti, and other related issues have run their course)

    Where the problem–and it is a democratic issue–arises, is when shutttering parliament is done to recalibrate government!
    What a crock!
    Appointing senators and new cabinet members is a process which can (and does) happen outside of parliament on recess.

    What to do about it?
    1) Tell Andrew Coyne that his opining is undemocratic!
    2) Tell Harper his actions are undemocratic!
    3) Tell opposition parties to put laws into place which require consent from parliament–yes the government is in charge of the purse but they are not in charge of parliament!

  • Elizabethtoo

    What a great idea. Think of the money we would save. This article is hardly undemocratic. In fact, it would be far more democratic to abolish parliament as it is since we have an antiquated system that cannot possibly keep up with the rate at which technologies are changing human life. When you vote for one person in a party, that person becomes part of the national stew with very diluted ability to bring your concerns to the fore. There is so much money spent on political posturing that the issues are not being addressed. Why do we need several parties when the issues are all common? The economy, the environment, crime, poverty, global relations. Why don't we choose the experts in each area and form a Great Council to address the real issues and stop diddling around with politics and get the work done. Every time there is a cabinet shuffle, the taxpayer pays and yet nothing is ever really achieved. I thank Andrew for this article and I wish my fellow Canadians could wake up and see how dysfunctional our system really is.

  • http://www.matthewbproman.com/ John Proman

    That really depends if action is needed in a short span of time. Great article Andrew.

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