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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  • Mulletaur

    "The good work that MPs do in their constituencies, forwarding immigration letters and the like, could be carried on by party officials."

    Lordy, lordy, he's calling for apparatchiks. How funny.

  • Mulletaur

    "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 know that, in suggesting this, Guy Giorno is presently commissioning his pollsters to run this past focus groups to see whether the Conservatives could actually get away with this …

  • Jordan

    The key to making Parliament relevant is to remove the requirement that a party riding association's nominee be approved by the leader. That provision of the Elections Act puts all MP's at the mercy of their party leaders and takes away any independence they might wish to exercise. Combine that reform with the British practice of having the party Parliamentary caucus choose the leader and I believe you will restore sufficient power to individual MP's to make Parliament relevant without taking so much power away from the executive as make its power, and the accountability of the government to the electorate for the state of public policy, too diffuse.

  • matt

    Isn't Parliament shuttered for five weeks extra, not two months?

  • peter

    Parliament is where the government is confronted face to face with the opposition. It is needed to create a check and balance. The position of the Canadian prime minister is already all too mighty, even more so than the American President who is accountable towards congress. Concerning the election of a party rather than electing your local mp, it is always better to have someone accountable who is elected directly by the electorate. We the electorate decide who represents us, if we were electing a party, who knows with who we would end up with.

  • Darcy O'Neil

    Oh, you mean a presidential system just like the US. The growing problem with Canadians is that we're getting politically lazy. Maybe Harper, for all his evils, will force Canadians to re-engage.

  • Atomic Walrus

    What makes Parliament ludicrous is the way politics are practiced by Canada's political parties. They are superficial and hypocritical, dancing around the issues for fear of provoking any little disagreement that the other parties will blow out of proportion for political gain. Of course, that's what we get for supporting big-tent political parties – hardly anyone agrees with the full platform, but everybody has some special interest that one of the parties can cater to, bribing us with our own money.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/OntarioTown OntarioTown

    Nope, we don't need no damn senate and parliament and the US doesn't need no damn senate and congress and the Brits need no House of Lords and parliament.

    Nope, we don't need all that expense – just have a dictatorship. It's simple, easy and you don't have to think.

  • Guest

    Don't you think that parliment has become less useful, because as a society we have let it? This is the 3rd time in 15 months, and yet the public's desire to have our politicians work is nothing more than a murmer. Somehow we have come to live in a country, that when people take to the streets to fight for a cause, they are viewed with derision and disdain. Voting is not the only way for our voices to be heard. My fear is that if we continue to have a parliment that is as ineffective as the one we currently have, then our democracy is nothing more than an illusion.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/frenchie101 frenchie101

    I love how the media keeps saying 3 months.Its 15 days! the parties agreed to suspend parliament for the Olympics Talk about knickers is a knot about nowt!

  • bk in Bellingham

    While understanding Coyne's general point about the impotence of Parliament, the initial blub from CP doesn't have to be a reflection of that impotence.

    The UK Parliament begins a new session with a throne speech every year, usually in November. There's actually a certain logic to starting afresh with a new legislative program like that.

    In fact, the UK Commons works marginally better than the Canadian one, although it has little to do with whether or not there's an annual throne speech. Backbench MPs do occasionally raise up and vote against their party. Part of this is that there isn't the signing of nomination papers in the same fashion as Canada, but more importantly, the British House of Commons has more members, and this leads to a fair cadre of people who realize they'll never climb the greasy pole into Cabinet and thus find more latitude to think for themselves.

  • Barbara

    what did the Manley Report say about detainees, if anything? Was that an issue then, when the PM appointed this committee to guide him on the Afghan mission he inherited from the Liberal regime? Never have I seen such a concerted effort by media and oppositions to absolutely destroy a sitting government..minority at that

    • http://intensedebate.com/people/frenchie101 frenchie101

      No, neither have I.

  • Jim L. Sekerak

    re Coyne's article on parliamentary reform. I read the suggestion of one who recomended that coyne should move somewhere else!. I often read similar suggestions directed at those with whom the blogger or letter-to-editor wirter disagrees. Often these suggested travel recomendations have a specific destination in mind and even encourage time-travelling. Thus, one who questions democracy-go to a totalitarian state; if one supports an R.C.Teaching-return to the Middle Ages; a comment re. ethnic/racial issues- return to your country of origin and so on. If we could ensure that those so directed could go to a country that is facing an under-population crisis, we could create a win-win solution.Two small problemshowever, come to mind: We do need brave and intelligent critics of our institutionalized thinking-Political Correctness, for example and all of the requisited movement will impact on Global Warming.

  • tenni

    Your thoughts turn my stomach and anger me. I think that what you see as a realistic view is not to be trusted. Fixing Parliament is not done by electing a dictator every so many years. Voices of the people will count one way or another: at the ballot box or on the streets. Is that what you want? The people to rise up and spill blood when the elected dictator gets it wrong. Get real. Make suggestions to improve Parliament not dismiss Parliament.

    I suppose in your ideal world, Andrew Coyne would be permitted to print his thoughts and no one would be permitted to criticize Andrew Coyne?

  • DVK

    I know it's meant to be a Swiftian satire, except – it strikes me as a thoroughly great idea. I for one wouldn't mind it one bit.

  • Lorelie

    While we’re at it, why not prorogue elections – indefinitely? Half the people don’t care and don’t bother to vote, let alone to actually pay attention to what goes on in Parliament anyway. This whole democracy thing is really just a nuisance, we all know that, and Canadians whine and complain anytime we’re asked to go to the polls. Let’s forget about all that democracy foolishness and let Mr Harper go on doing whatever he feels like doing. He doesn’t seem like such a bad fellow and I’m pretty sure he probably knows what’s best for all of us, better than we do. After all we’re just ordinary citizens and what do we know?
    The sad thing about all this is that many Canadians seem to agree, unable as they are to raise themselves from their complacency and lethargy to care,

    • Mulletaur

      *baa baa baa*

      • Avid Reader

        auditioning to be the black sheep? :)
        if so, do you have any wool?
        (or just the wool the politicians are trying to pull over our eyes?)

  • guest

    Allow me to propose an even more radical way of restoring meaning to the debates in the HoC. Instead of abolishing Parliament, let's abolish political parties.

  • http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=39602671693 Joe Chip

    What Canada needs is changes to the institutional structure of government. More specifically,I would suggest that changing the way that we elect members of government would be the most fruitful. The "winner takes all" system of first past the post (our current system) encourages some of the worst sorts of behaviour by members of government. An excellent remedy to this would be changing to a preferential ballot, which discourages partisanship and all of this BS political gamesmanship. I've outlined my arguments for this system and against others in my small Facebook group, Feel free to join or let me know what you think!
    http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=39602671693

  • Dar Hartley

    You are "bang on" Mr. Coyne. We might even forget how to insult one another.

  • senior patricia

    Perhaps you could do "A Modest Proposal" for a Dictatorship – it would really save a lot of money, and all the agony and energy now used to keep the the system going. Anyone know a candidate for a benevelant dictator?

  • krrh

    Neither party is in a position to come clean with the public and speak to them as adults. Maybe it's time to start a new party, or resurrect an old one. I propose the Whigs.

  • winnieh

    which was it, that Andrew Coyne was trying to distract readers away from the real problem here, or did he actually miss the point completely? The real issue here is not whether Parliament sits or not, but a Prime Minister I and many Canadians did not vote for, behaves exactly like a bully once again, the main reason he can never get a majority government. Many Canadian cannot stand his propenity to shut his critics up when things are not going his way. Shutting down the Parliament was just another symptom, but the Prime Minister's main problem is what the Chinese would call"little air," Little air to breath in contrarian point of view. and for that very reason, he is not fit to continue to take up such a BIG job.

  • Third Chimp

    But seriously folks, why is it so hard for most people to see that our archaic first-past-the-post electoral system cannot produce anything but dysfunctional government since it wasn’t designed for a multi-party system? Oh right, because the media pundits will never give proportional representation a fair airing in public. I don’t know why, it is a great puzzle. A tiny bit of research reveals that various forms of proportional representation are working very well in many countries. They will always trot out the worst possible example they can find (Italy or something). Well, we have finally surpassed Italy on the instability scale. I challenge Macleans to run a serious piece on proportional representation.

    • usi

      Thanks for finally pointing out the elephant in the room that our media are steadily ignoring! It's the system, stupid. The first-past-the-post system can only produce distorted results in elections where five parties vie for support. We get false majority governments with no more than 40% of electoral support, and our elections regularly focus on the small percentage of swing voters to produce that magical result of which Conservatices and Liberals continue to dream. With this kind of system you need only a ruthless opportunist like Harper to reduce democratic institutions to a sham. And he is doing this very successfully and ever more brazenly because he is counting on the unquestioning support of his voting base and the apathy of Canadian voters at large. And only in North America would a politician get away with denigrating his critics en masse as "elitist' and "chattering classes", reassuring his base that rational arguments don't matter.

  • K. Jean Cottam

    What this country needs is Proportional Representation. This would make it impossible for the Prime Minister to do what he damned well pleases. What we now have amounts to a dictatorship, rather than democracy. We need more cooperation and less confrontation in our politics. The successful democracies of Europe and New Zealand have some form of proportional representation. Its a myth to suggest Proportional Representation doesn't work. It does work and it is quite stable, except for Israel where the situation is unique and parties have a religious outlook.

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

    The article says, "There hasn’t been a mind changed or a vote swayed by a parliamentary debate in 60 years."

    The committees have done important work. The Afghan detainee committee of parliament did such good work that Harper had to lock down the building to shut it down.

    Also, instead of dismissing the usefulness of parliament based on some recent examples, why not think of ways it could be improved so that it returns to its full potential. Like electing a prime minister who wants to work WITH the majority of MPs rather than constantly needling them.

    (PS: I'm really not sure whether there was some tongue in cheekness to this, but we desperately need to keep the momentum going on the anti-prorogation issue, and this might help…)

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