38th PARLIAMENT, 1st SESSION
EDITED HANSARD • NUMBER 123
CONTENTS
Monday, June 27, 2005
Mr. Ed Komarnicki (Souris—Moose
Mountain, CPC): Mr. Speaker, I will be taking a different
tack tonight. I will look at the process that has led us to
be facing Bill C-38 at report stage and closure.
I must say, in respect of the bill itself, that marriage essentially
is the union of two people, a man and a woman, who consummate
the relationship with sexual relations with the potential to
procreate. Marriage has well been said to be something more
than a contract, either religious or civil, to be an institution,
and it should remain that way. For the Liberal Party, it is
more about politics, power and arrogance than it is about the
essence of Bill C-38.
The government was prepared to make deals to keep its own members
on side by promising broad committee hearings and not introducing
the bill past report stage and third reading until fall. Then,
when the Liberals were able to make a bigger deal, they decided
to proceed to ram the bill through both stages. There will be
a price for such an action and the Prime Minister and his enforcers
shall pay the ultimate price at the ballot box.
Surely, the public at large will not let them get away with
this. For those in the Liberal Party who oppose Bill C-38, the
marriage bill, but voted with the government in a sneak manoeuvre
to pass Bill C-48, the NDP budget bill, without notice, can
certainly talk the talk, but they fall far short of walking
the walk.
Let me speak briefly about procedures being used in this House
that preclude the giving of notice. I could hardly believe that
in a democracy, in a free and democratic country like Canada,
the governing party would resort to procedures that would achieve
their end by means of subterfuge and subtleness.
Surely, on an important issue like the NDP budget and Bill C-38,
the government should at the very least provide notice of its
intention and face the issue fair and square, so that the representatives
of the people of Canada can make their views known.
Instead, what did the Liberals did? According to a Canadian
Press report of June 25, by 8:30 p.m. Thursday last week, the
Liberals were hiding out in the government lobby with one MP
stating that the Liberals were going to bushwhack the Conservatives.
I am sorry for the confused logic. It is really an affront and
it is a bushwhacking of democracy.
I left the House at around 9:00 p.m. to have supper with my
wife. Before I was finished supper, and without notice, Bill
C-48 was up for a vote. Something as important as a budget vote
was being snuck through the House. In all of my life, I have
never heard or seen anything like it. The Liberals could not
hijack democracy without the complicity of the NDP and the Bloc.
It is understandable that the NDP would engage in a procedure
such as this as the leader himself asked if putting aside corruption,
would the Minister of Finance change the budget? The NDP were
prepared to make a deal regardless of the tactics or the manners
of the government.
However, the Bloc, who opposed the NDP budget, Bill C-48, had
nothing to gain or lose by the vote being taken on Thursday
or on Monday, when we had a full contingent of our members in
the House. To agree to Bill C-48 being placed before the House
without notice was either intentional mischief or done for consideration
of some kind. I can see no other rational conclusion. In either
case, such actions are odious and any trust on my part from
here on in will have to be earned.
All these steps were taken to force Bill C-38 to remain on its
own, undressed, in full view of closure motions, limits on debate,
and the concurrence of three parties to shove it through. Then
on a foundation that it accepts important and significant matters,
the government disposes it without notice given to the representatives
of the people of Canada. That is wrong.
Any debate in this circumstance, in this context, is a farce
and simply a matter of the government trying to appear magnanimous
when it knows full well, it is about to drop the hammer to close
matters off, as we just witnessed in this House tonight. I find
this offensive. The fix, as they say, is in.
Indeed, this type of conduct may be what is necessary to awaken
a sleeping giant. Those who agree with Bill C-38 and whose views
will be made known in the ballot box in the next election will
find out who is the ultimate judge in this particular case.
The Saskatoon Star Phoenix, on June 25, stated with reference
to the government's conduct that “Thursday was the third
time such a stunt was used in Canada's history”, and a
stunt it was. I doubt it was ever used in such an important
and significant a situation as a budget bill and a bill that
redefines the definition of marriage. Obviously, it has never
been done in this context. This is an all-time first and an
all-time low in terms of its use in the history of this great
country we call Canada.
Let us have a look at what brought us here today. Last week
on Thursday morning, under Standing Order 57, a minister of
the Crown served notice that debate with respect to extending
the sitting of this House should not be further adjourned, with
the provision that no member shall be allowed to rise to speak
after 8:00 p.m., when a vote was held with respect to this motion.
To put it simply, it was a closure notice with a time limit
on speeches on an important issue such as we face here today.
That was wrong and the government will pay the price for that.
Let us have a look at the motion itself, and I spoke to it the
other day. The motion was prefaced by saying “notwithstanding
any Standing Order or usual practice”. In other words,
it was overriding anything that could stand in the way of the
motion by way of Standing Order or usual practices. We put those
aside. What does the motion go on to say? Essentially, that
the sitting would continue until a minister of the Crown proposed,
without notice, a motion to adjourn.
In other words, a minister could unilaterally have this House
adjourn at any time without notice. It has come to this. What
if anything or is there anything the government might not do
to achieve its end? This seemed to me to be a heavy-handed approach
and something one would not expect in this country.
This stunt, as referred to in the Star Phoenix, took place when
the NDP, the Liberals, and the Bloc agreed that the Minister
could propose to pass Bill C-48 without notice, without debate
or amendment.
The government dispensed with the Standing Orders and usual
practices to its advantage in circumstances that the Standing
Orders were never intended to be used. It is in these circumstances,
with this play of characters in office, that Bill C-38 finds
itself.
What hope is there for those who oppose its passage? The hope
is in the ballot box where they will have an opportunity to
remove these characters from office.
The government tried to tie Bill C-48 to this bill in case it
needed to apply to the Speaker for extension of the sittings,
but then decoupled it when they and the sneaky, no-notice NDP
budget Bill C-48 was voted in, in the middle of the night last
Thursday.
Father Raymond J. de Souza said, “When holding unto office
becomes the beginning and end of all activity, there are no
more politics, just the machinations of power”. He went
on to say that the corruption of our politics is now complete.
He refers to an article in the Toronto Sun that states, “--the
time has come to cool the fury in Parliament, to ease the pressure
on the Prime Minister to resort to seedy vote buying”.
He says that Canada's largest circulation newspaper and ardent
supporter of the Liberal Party concludes that the Prime Minister
is engaged in seedy behaviour but excuses it on the grounds
that otherwise he would be defeated by the opposition. It is
all about power and if a little seedy vote buying is necessary,
so be it.
He says what is cynicism in politics? It is the belief that
politics is not about the common good, nor what one sincerely
believes is right for the country, but only what is personally
advantageous to the office holder. It is a Prime Minister's
Chief of Staff discussing how one could go about trading offices
for votes without officially trading offices for votes.
The mockery of the process of Bill C-38 in committee has caused
the Liberal member for London—Fanshawe, to his credit,
to leave the party and sit as an independent. Why? Because he
knew what the Prime Minister promised, he would not deliver.
He observed what we did, the tricky procedural moves in committee
such as removing Liberal MPs in exchange for others who would
vote in correct ways, having members leave a meeting to cause
it to adjourn for lack of quorum, calling witnesses in batches
of four on very short notice, limiting witnesses to be called,
and heavily stacking the Liberal committee members and the witnesses
in favour of same sex marriage. Is this evidence of the Prime
Minister's solemn word for full, fair and meaningful public
hearings? Of course not.
The committee was asked to work to an unnecessary and premature
deadline to report to the House. The member went on to state
that witnesses were being given inadequate notice to appear
at committee hearing and some have been rudely treated when
they have attended. He said that the process as it was unfolding
was unfair and perfunctory at best, and that it was not what
he agreed to as a proper democratic consultation on such a major
piece of legislation as the proposed definition of marriage.
He added that in his view, the government had no democratic
mandate from the people of Canada to redefine marriage.
I wish to conclude with Chantal Hébert's comments in
the Toronto Star which could well be prophetic. She said:
Given the lengths to which [the Prime Minister] and his team
have gone just to prolong the life of their minority government
for a few more months, one has to wonder how many more ethical
niceties they would dispense with--
Having heard [the Prime Minister's] chief-of-staff Tim Murphy
nod and wink and dress up the Liberal window with future government
considerations, can anyone doubt that this is an administration
that is just as likely to live and die by the rule that the
end justifies the means?
The democratic deficit [the Prime Minister] so likes to wax
lyrical about has been compounded into an ethical one. And past
sins of omission and/or commission have been overshadowed by
current, in-your-face transgressions...It is a malaise that
permeates the upper reaches of the government.
So much for the loyalty of the country. Anything the Prime Minister
said suggesting that he encouraged a full debate on Bill C-38
in these sittings was, simply put, hogwash. The price the Prime
Minister will pay will be paid at the ballot box. He cannot
get away with such treachery as we witnessed in the House for
this long. The voters will see to it. Marriage should be defined
as the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all
others with no exceptions, no amendments, period.
Hon. Keith Martin (Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of
National Defence, Lib.): Mr. Speaker, I listened with great
interest to the hon. member's comments on this particular topic,
which is extremely sensitive. It has evoked a lot of emotion
from a lot of people in many quarters. All of us understand
the sensitivity of this issue because all of us in our ridings
have seen how divisive it has been in so many quarters. It is
important for any government to respond in a responsible fashion.
I have a couple of questions for the hon. member. As members
know full well, it costs about $20,000 an hour to keep this
House open. In the course of the debate, every single hour that
we are here, those hours are costing the taxpayers money. If
we keep on debating and debating, we have to ask ourselves,
are we actually going to change anything? Would a continuation
of this debate change anybody's mind and anybody's opinion?
The reality is that all members who have dealt with this issue
have made up their minds whether they are for or against. Further
debate is not going to change anything. There are no more amendments.
There is nothing that can be put forward that is going to change
anything.
The hon. member said that marriage is a union between a man
and a woman to the exclusion of all others, with the potential
to procreate. Does that mean that women over the age of 50 who
get married do not have a marriage?
Mr. Ed Komarnicki: Mr. Speaker, it is quite interesting that
this member would be concerned about how much it costs to operate
this House. This bill needs to be opposed and the costs should
be put in the background.
Where was this member when this House was being filibustered
by his own party for days on end, when they took away supply
days because they were not prepared to face a confidence motion?
The Liberals went for a week or more trying to skirt that issue,
filibustering on their own committee reports.
What was that costing per hour, and what was the purpose of
that, except to cling to power at all costs? What about spending
$4.6 billion? We will wait to see what the cost will be for
the little side deal that was made to invoke closure over the
last little while. There may be some consideration coming out
sooner. They blow billions of dollars and they are afraid to
keep this House open a little longer so they can hear responsible
arguments on Bill C-38.
As far as the committee is concerned, what happened to the Prime
Minister's promise to keep the committee going? We would not
have to be sitting here if the Prime Minister had kept his promise
to have broad consultations in committee, allow the committee
to have more hearings, and allow positive injections. The reason
we are still sitting is because of the member opposite who voted
for this House to be extended without notice.
What happened when the Liberals took away our supply day motions,
and when they lost the confidence of this House indirectly?
They had a constitutional obligation to bring the issue of confidence
before this House, but they used a week because it was not convenient
for the Prime Minister. He flew around the country and gave
out goodies, spent money, and used the machinery of power and
government jets when he had no authority and no constitutional
basis to do that. He did that simply to cling to power illegitimately
and to legitimize government, and that was wrong.
As far as marriage is concerned, if the hon. member would listen
very closely, it is the potential to procreate, and one lady
and one man have the potential to procreate naturally, biologically,
and not otherwise. That is the phrase “potential to procreate”.
I would say that there is more to this issue than a few dollars
and the machinations of clinging to power at all costs.
We should not be here at all. This bill should be in committee.
This bill should not be here. We are in a democracy and ought
to be experiencing it, but senior parliamentarians fail to see
that and they ought to know better, but they do not.
Mr. Yvon Godin (Acadie—Bathurst, NDP): Mr. Speaker, our
colleague from the Conservative Party was pretty concerned about
Bill C-48 last week. It was a good bill because it gave $1.5
billion to students to cut their debt and $1.5 billion for affordable
housing. I want to ask the hon. member, why did he go for dinner
with his wife at 9:30 p.m. instead of being on duty until 12:00
midnight and doing his duty by voting against the bill if he
did not like it?
Mr. Ed Komarnicki: Mr. Speaker, I am not even sure the last
question deserves an answer. However, it annoys me that bills
as important as Bill C-48 and Bill C-38 would come to the House
without notice and be voted on while I was having dinner. I
came back to the House. I have been in the House more often
than that member.
The government ought to be responsible and take its duty seriously.
Bill C-48 has no plan, it has nothing. How many housing units
were build by the government in 11 years? There were very little
for the money spent. The Liberals spent $1 billion with not
a house being built.
There are more people living in poverty today than 11 years
ago. There are more people homeless on the street while the
government has been in office. That is something to be noted.