Beyond The Commons

Beyond The Commons

Aaron Wherry covers all the goings-on in and around Parliament Hill. Follow Aaron on Twitter: @aaronwherry

The Commons: Who's laughing now?

by Aaron Wherry on Monday, March 21, 2011 6:03pm - 103 Comments

The Scene. In case anyone on the government side had forgotten, the leader of the opposition stood to recall where proceedings had left off a week ago and what else had arisen in the interim.

“Mr. Speaker, the government faces two RCMP investigations at once, one of them about Bruce Carson’s influence peddling right in the Prime Minister’s Office, and four members of the Prime Minister’s inner circle face accusations of election fraud that could result in jail time,” Mr. Ignatieff reported. “As if that was not enough, a committee of this House has found the government in contempt of Parliament.”

The government side chuckled at this last bit.

Democracy is, of course, a funny thing. An unruly, chaotic, competitive thing, compelled by unwritten rules and collective will, as much theoretical as it is practical and inherent. Ours is formally practiced in ancient dignity: “Mr. Speaker” this and “honourable member” that. A quirk that renders the proceedings both hallowed and peculiar, grounded and remote.

And from that do we arrive now at a finding—or at least a formal recommendation to that effect—of contempt.

It seems to be the government side’s feeling that this is not anything to be taken seriously. That this is all only to do with the fact that a majority of seats in the House of Commons are presently occupied by MPs who have pledged themselves to parties other than the Conservative side.

That may well be true. But to argue as much is, it seems, to question the entire legitimacy of our parliamentary system, from the power and purpose of the elected MP to the function of the political party to the role and representation of the voter in our democracy. By week’s end, this government may be the first in this nation’s history—the Liberal side claims this extends to the history of all other commonwealth governments—to be found in contempt of Parliament.

“This is an unprecedented cascade of abuse. The issue here is one of trust,” Mr. Ignatieff continued. “How can Canadians remain trusting of a government guilty of such flagrant abuse of power?”

The government side sent up John Baird to reassure the home audience. ”Mr. Speaker, it will not come as any surprise to the leader of the Liberal Party that I completely reject all of the misleading premises in his question,” Mr. Baird said, though it was unclear whether he meant here to dispute facts or meaning.

“There is no member of the government who is under investigation for a criminal offence,” he continued, previewing the Conservative side’s new election slogan.

Here, then, the government House leader moved to delight the crowd with a delicate three-step.

First, a lament for the previous Liberal administration: “Let me be very clear, this government is the government that acted very expeditiously to bring in the Federal Accountability Act, to clean up the ethical mess that we inherited from the previous Liberal government.”

Second, a gratuitous swipe at Mr. Ignatieff’s previous residency: “He was not in Canada to know exactly how bad the Liberal ethics policies were.”

And third, a salute to the man for whom the Government of Canada is now named: “Maybe he should look at the Federal Accountability Act and look at the great changes, especially, that this Prime Minister has ushered in.”

Unpersuaded, Mr. Ignatieff restated his thesis en français. Mr. Baird was now positively besmirched. “Mr. Speaker, I guess the Liberal leader believes we do not need to have police to conduct an investigation,” he sighed, apparently in reference to the questions surrounding Mr. Carson. “We do not need to have a court system. He will simply assign guilt as he sees it on the floor of the House of Commons.”

Not, of course, that the government wasn’t entirely committed to seeing the guilty held to account. “Let me be very clear, this is the government that brought in tough penalties for people who break the law,” Mr. Baird said. “Anyone convicted of breaking the law will face the full force of Canadian law.”

Up to and including, one assumes, those four Conservatives charged with violating election law.

Mr. Ignatieff was now compelled to go all figurative on his opponent. “Mr. Speaker, the Conservatives cannot deny the RCMP is crawling all over the government at the moment,” he said.

The Liberal leader switched then to a more fiduciary concern ahead of tomorrow’s budget. “Conservatives also expect us to vote tomorrow for a budget without telling Canadians what their waste is going to cost, waste on corporate tax giveaways, waste on prisons, waste on jets which they do not have accurate costing on for Canadians,” he declared. “Instead of telling Canadians the truth, they went out last week and spent millions of taxpayer dollars on government partisan advertising.”

Mr. Ignatieff had but a simple request. “When,” he begged, “is the government going to show some respect for taxpayers and a little respect for democracy?”

Some? A little? Here was an obvious attempt at compromise.

Mr. Baird was not ready to negotiate. “Mr. Speaker,” he demurred, “I do not agree with the leader of the opposition at all.”

Indeed, Mr. Baird was now apparently quite hurt. “The Liberal Party can try to attack the government with political smears,” he sighed. “It has become very good at it.”

Now it was the Liberal side’s turn to engage in theatric guffaws.

The Stats. Ethics, 19 questions. Infrastructure and taxation, four questions each. Libya, government contracts, employment and the economy, two questions each. Libya and Rights & Democracy, one question each.

John Baird, 12 answers. Rona Ambrose and Jim Flaherty, four answers each. Rob Merrifield, three answers. Christian Paradis, Peter MacKay, Stockwell Day, Diane Finley and Vic Toews, two answers each. Diane Ablonczy, John Duncan, Daniel Petit, Lawrence Cannon and Tony Clement, one answer each.

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  • katie smith

    Uhm, Mr. Baird? What good is a Federal Accountability Act when you guys just turn around and break it?

    • TimesArrow

      Cuz that way we can point out liberals never ever live up to it, even though it wasn' in effect in their time in office dearie. – Baird.

  • steven katona

    hey harper? taxpayer makes the rules harper. watch and learn. our god fearin seniors have had enough of you and biard's two stepping two faced common's parlour tricks eh? no stimulus here harper. you're walkin on taxpayer's ice and we're all fed up with the federal party in power. eh harper?

  • steven katona

    i hate you so much i'm rhyming my rants now. 5 long years of harpervision has led this patriot to be double crossed and wondering what shade of grey his government wears while pretending to be one of the seven dwarfs? eh harper? you aint no princess and this aint no fairytale. this is real life harper and you and your minority boys are out! bank on it harper! i'll show my father what freedom means cause he fled for his life to come to canada and i'll show him the power of the polity as my vote will be among millions that will cast you down from parliment hill and teach you a lesson you'll never forget! you've spit on the charter and stomped on our god sworn constitution as your minions flee the ranks and file for their slippery rock niche to hide henceforth! now bare witness to the power of the canadian voter as we all share one common goal! democracy and freedom shall be seen as the whole world shall bare witness to the power of freedom as we all vote with our hearts and minds in clarity as we all come under the big red tent once again to save our way of life from the conservative snakes. its over now harper.

  • steven katona

    5 years is enough of this 'ism'. we'll see the power of your core as canada rocks the house with its vote of non-confidence and all canadians will rejoice as we go to the polls to show our courage to the world as we elect a new leader to guide canada into the 21st century!

  • chet

    The previous Liberal government did this all the time, as noted by Mr. Coyne previously.

    This isn't exceptional, it's routine. The only exception being that this is a conservative government, and the opposition is in desperation mode.

    Like prorogue, it can literally happen hundreds of times, and many times with the previous Liberal government, but that 105th instance? Now prorogue is a political evil.

    If the oppostion wishes to play such games that's their perogative. But the media appears wholly disinterested in holding the opposition to any account. To the contrary, they've gone "all in" in actively campaigning for them.

    A magnigying glass to the right, a blind eye to the left.

    A scandal of epic proportions.

  • http://www.dobry-start.com luca

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  • s_c_f

    "It seems to be the government side’s feeling that this is not anything to be taken seriously. That this is all only to do with the fact that a majority of seats in the House of Commons are presently occupied by MPs who have pledged themselves to parties other than the Conservative side.

    But to argue as much is, it seems, to question the entire legitimacy of our parliamentary system, from the power and purpose of the elected MP to the function of the political party to the role and representation of the voter in our democracy"

    Statements like these expose Wherry for who he truly is: just one more Liberal partisan. I mean, c'mon. Our democracy is threatened because the parties cannot agree whether the financial reporting is extensive enough? And this is supposed to be "contempt"? Because of differences of opinion in accounting? Seriously?

    And the other contempt is about record-keeping, about whether it's appropriate to stick the word "not" onto a piece of paper? Seriously? The opposition is brain-dead. That's why Conservative support is surging.

  • s_c_f

    Some? A little? Here was an obvious attempt at compromise.

    If obvious means "not within a country mile", then perhaps that's true. It sounded more like a smear to me, not an attempt at compromise. But I guess Wherry knows best.

  • http://www.wholesalekk.com wholesalekk
  • Bearzerkerbea

    The Harper Government has stepped over the line. They have been caught falsifying documents, misleading Canadians, lying to Parliament, blackballing an NGO for being critical of Israel, withholding budget costs from the Parliamentary Budget Officer, committing election fraud, using government resources to target ethnic votes and fund raise, and renaming the Government of Canada after Harper.

    They are also bungling things on the budget file: $6B bribe to ON and BC to adopt the HST, $2.2B payoff to QC in the works, $14B a year in new corporate tax cuts, $5B for Parliament renovations including a $42M dome over a *temporary* House of Commons building, G20 billion dollar WEEKEND boondoggle, $10B new prisons, $30B money-pit fighter jets, $35B for navy ships and icebreakers so oil companies can drill the Arctic. Complete fiscal incompetence.

    Under Harper the economic advantage he inherited from the Liberals has vanished. Mark Carney predicts Canada will soon fall to the bottom of the G7 in the recovery; a decade of $15B trade surpluses has turned into record $40B trade deficits; Canada has fallen to #10 in the Conference Board of Canada’s ranking of the top #17 economies; our broadband and cell phone coverage has become the slowest and most expensive among developed countries.

    There are countless reasons for an election. We don’t need to wait for some grandiose ideological issue to emerge. In fact, why did Harper break his election law to force one in 2008? Because he was ahead in the polls. That is the furthest from a defining cause.

  • Bearzerker

    The Harper Government has stepped over the line. They have been caught falsifying documents, misleading Canadians, lying to Parliament, blackballing an NGO for being critical of Israel, withholding budget costs from the Parliamentary Budget Officer, committing election fraud, using government resources to target ethnic votes and fund raise, and renaming the Government of Canada after Harper.

    They are also bungling things on the budget file: $6B bribe to ON and BC to adopt the HST, $2.2B payoff to QC in the works, $14B a year in new corporate tax cuts, $5B for Parliament renovations including a $42M dome over a *temporary* House of Commons building, G20 billion dollar WEEKEND boondoggle, $10B new prisons, $30B money-pit fighter jets, $35B for navy ships and icebreakers so oil companies can drill the Arctic. Complete fiscal incompetence.

    Under Harper the economic advantage he inherited from the Liberals has vanished. Mark Carney predicts Canada will soon fall to the bottom of the G7 in the recovery; a decade of $15B trade surpluses has turned into record $40B trade deficits; Canada has fallen to #10 in the Conference Board of Canada's ranking of the top #17 economies; our broadband and cell phone coverage has become the slowest and most expensive among developed countries.

    There are countless reasons for an election. We don't need to wait for some grandiose ideological issue to emerge. In fact, why did Harper break his election law to force one in 2008? Because he was ahead in the polls. That is the furthest from a defining cause.

  • Philanthropist

    The corrupt Liberal/NDP/Bloc coalition may regret making mountains out of molehills. Pretending this to be a case of 'contempt of Parliament' is a joke – and they know it, if the voters ever decide to trust crooked Liberals again, the whole 'contempt of Parliament' thing could become a weekly sideshow.

  • bennji1977

    You really don't think that Canadian's care how much of their money the government is spending?

    You don't think that most Canadian's want to know how much something is going to cost before there is a decision to purchase?

  • http://twitter.com/ScottBelyea @ScottBelyea

    "… if the voters ever decide to trust crooked Liberals again,…"

    You clearly don't remember how many ministers Mulroney lost to scandal/corruption; the contempt in which he was held by the time he left office, and the unprecedented electoral disaster that loomed when he stepped down.

    I suspect the Liberals will spend a while longer in the wilderness, but to suggest as you and others do that they'll never be trusted with government again is just silly.

  • Really?

    Of course Canadians care, I just hope the conservatives have better accountants than the liberals, with the long gun registry. That was liberal largesse done liberally! And what are the stats on crimes solved or prevented because of this registry? I think getting more perps off the streets would accomplish more. Right now many reman centres are revolving doors because the police have no more room at the inn.

  • Halo_Override

    I just hope the conservatives have better accountants than the liberals

    Spoiler Alert: they don't.

  • bennji1977

    Thankfully the Conervatives have got this figured out.

    If you don't announce the amount that you are going to spend, no one will ever know if you have overspeant, and therefore, will never be able to call it a boondoggle.

    When the public does start to see the amount of their money that is being speant, you can simply say that is what you had always intended to spend. If that dosen't fly, you can also produce "auto-penned" documents with a "not" over the original estimated costs.

  • http://twitter.com/matwilson6 @matwilson6

    I hope Ignatiff gets to be the next prime Minister of Canada, we deserve somebody who is intelligent, reasonable and open-minded. Harper will make a good Canadian Idol host, if the show is ever revived.

  • OriginalEmily1

    Party support at fall 2008 levels: poll
    http://www.metronews.ca/toronto/canada/article/80…

  • Arturolexo

    Sorry, Ignoteif is not intelilgent, reasonable or open minded. More like incompetent, arrogant and divisive.

  • Bluescot

    No debate in this rag.

  • Jenn_

    And in case anyone is ever paying any attention, you can announce spending on some things five or six times for the same thing.

  • lgarvin

    Sorry, Ignoteif is not intelilgent…"

    Well, not compared to you, he isn't. But you set a pretty lofty standard.

  • Healthcare Insider

    That is uncalled for! Perhaps English is not Arturolexo's first language or he is not a good speller. Regardless, poor spelling or typing does not indicate low intelligence. However, mocking people's errors on the keyboard reveals a distinct lack of character on your part.

  • kathrync

    "Ignoteif is not intelilgent"

    Just to point out, both those words were in the post he was replying to – he could have cut and paste if he wasn't sure. Poor spelling and typos in these posts are always fair game in my opinion, especially if the whole point of the post is only to try to call someone else stupid.

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