NEW! Canada's Hockey Experience: The Sport of a Country | Canada’s golden pursuits
Previous Articles

4. The House of Commons

Posted on 25 May 2010

By Norman Hillmer

On December 11, 1979, John Crosbie entered the House of Commons in grey and black sealskin boots from his native Newfoundland, following the tradition that Ministers of Finance wear new shoes when they present the government’s economic forecast. It was Crosbie’s first budget speech, and it was to be his last.Crosbie’s budget promised higher energy prices and increased taxes. These were tough measures, and likely to be unpopular in many quarters, but Crosbie and Prime Minister Joe Clark were confident. Their Conservative party had won the federal election only months before, unseating the Liberals of Pierre Trudeau, and Trudeau who had announced that he would soon leave the party leadership was clearly uninterested in leading the parliamentary opposition. The New Democrats and the Quebec Créditistes were also badly bruised. Both had lost a substantial number of their House of Commons seats on election night.

The media and business reviews of the Crosbie budget were generally positive. It was Christmas time on Parliament Hill, with the holidays coming. Surely a favourable Commons vote on the budget was only a formality.

Yet Clark had fewer than half of the 282 seats in the Commons. To pass the budget, he needed help from one of the other parties. The New Democrats, angered by an increase of four cents a litre in the excise tax on gasoline, moved a motion of no confidence in the government. The Liberals supported the New Democrats, while the Créditistes abstained.

And that was it — enough to bring down the government. Clark lost the motion by six votes. Defeated in the House of Commons on an essential part of his political program, Clark immediately requested that the Governor General dissolve Parliament and call an election. This was done, and in February 1980 the voters threw Clark out of office. A resurrected Pierre Trudeau returned as Prime Minister of Canada.

The Conservatives had ignored the most fundamental principle of Canadian parliamentary democracy. A prime minister cannot continue in office without the support of a majority of the members of the House of Commons. Clark’s party did not have sufficient backing to govern on its own.

The House of Commons is made up of Members of Parliament, or MPs, elected across the provinces and territories of Canada roughly on the basis of representation by population. The prime minister and almost all the cabinet come from the Commons; the executive that administers the nation’s business is not a separate branch of government, as is the case in the United States.

The Commons operates as a national forum for the clash of political ideas and priorities. Government members sit on one side of the Commons chamber, at the right hand of the Speaker, the Commons umpire. The opposition sits opposite, only a few metres away. The competition is intense, giving rise to the worst in partisan misbehaviour, but also encouraging legitimate debate and scrutiny of the government.

Question Period, held every weekday when the House is in session and widely broadcast on television, allows the opposition to demand that the government respond to difficult questions. It is messy, chaotic, often nasty, and answers frequently do not come, but Question Period demands that the prime minister and his party justify their actions and policies. In the British House of Commons, the model for Canada’s Commons, prime ministers are given the questions in advance, and they attend Question Period only once a week. Not so in Canada, where the prime minister and cabinet members appear regularly and have no knowledge of the questions beforehand.

No law can be made and no tax imposed without the approval of the House of Commons, Canada’s chief legislative body. However, members of parliament are expected to vote with their leaders in the House of Commons, and MPs who do not are subject to strict party discipline.

Individual MPs can make their voices heard through committee work and in political party settings, but it is difficult to stand apart from the crowd or become known to the public. When they stepped a short distance from Parliament, the sharp-tongued Pierre Trudeau said early on in his first term as prime minister, members of the House were of no consequence.

Long-serving prime ministers from Trudeau on have dominated the levers of power, so much so that political commentators frequently compare them to American presidents. Yet, unlike presidents, prime ministers control their legislatures and can name senators and Supreme Court judges. The tight grip of prime ministers on government is sometimes described as an elected dictatorship.

The House of Commons, though, is at its best the people’s legislature, reflecting, representing, and expressing popular needs and opinions. And sometimes it can be more than that, particularly when no single party is fully in command.

Just ask Joe Clark and John Crosbie.

The Canadian Experience is a 52-week history series designed to tell the story of our country to all Canadians. Sponsored by Multimedia Nova Corporation and Diversity Marketing Services/Lingua Ads partner publishers, the series features articles by our country’s foremost historians on a wide range of topics. Past articles and author bios are available at www.cdnexperience.ca. The Canadian Experience is copyright © 2010-2011 Multimedia Nova Corporation.

For members of the DMS/Lingua Ads Partner Publisher Network who would like to publish this series, please contact Joe March or Qaiser Rehman.

2 Responses to “4. The House of Commons”

  1. David McPhee says:

    I would argue that far from being ignorant of the principle of resposible government Clark had proactively embraced it believing that fear of an election would gain him the support he required to get his budget passed.

    It was this fundamental false sense of bravado and a profound misreading of the political dynamic afoot rather than a failure to understand a ‘principle of Canadian parliamentary democracy that guided his strategy, and would forever lable him as a weak and confused political leader.

    It was also clear that Trudeau and hs advisors new exactly what the power of MP’s. Indeed I believe it was his saying that they were nobodies ‘forty feet from the hill’ but clearly in this instance they were on the hill where they were powerful indeed

  2. there was an an amazing evening I remember it well – it was the annual Parliamentary Xmas party and Trudeau his staff and a few Ministers were plotting the defeat of the Clark government the next day – as the article points out we were counting to see if we could bring in enough members and with NDP support spring a vote of confidence we would win. I told Mike Duffy we were going to do it – he said “oh yah”! We did, and the now rare total collaboration and dedication among Cabinet Ministers, MP’s and staff pulled it off. And we won the election which followed!


Leave a Reply

IMPORTANT! To be able to proceed, you need to solve the following simple math (so we know that you are a human) :-) What is 10 + 15 ?
Please leave these two fields as-is:

Canada's Hockey Experience

Canada’s golden pursuits

Posted on 01 September 2011

By Brian Baker
On Canadian soil, in sudden death overtime, Sidney Crosby took the feed from Jarome Iginla, tied up in the corner, and snapped the puck through a small sliver of daylight that U.S. goalie Ryan Miller failed to block.
The passion and celebration that ensued over the “Golden Goal” at the Winter Olympics in 2010 [...more]

Quiz
Multimedia Nova Divisions and Websites
Media for the New Mainstream®
MNC Logo
Media & Publishing Multicom Media Services
Multicultural Marketing Diversity Marketing Services / Lingua Ads | the New Mainstream
Printing & Distribution NewsWeb Printing & Distribution
Diversity Employment Portal TalentOyster.com
Civic Literacy The Canadian Experience | BringBackTheAct.ca | LaLois1867ChezNous.ca
Corriere Canadese | Tandem
Correo Canadiense
Nove Ilhas
The Town Crier Group of Community Newspapers
Vaughan Today
Publications:
Privacy | © 2012 Multimedia Nova Corporation | Contact Us