Calgary Herald

Tory senators accused of blocking reform

PM’s goal of independen­t Senate impeded

- Joan Bryden

The government representa­tive in the Senate is accusing Conservati­ve senators of deliberate­ly trying to sabotage Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s efforts to turn the upper house into a less partisan, independen­t chamber of sober second thought.

Sen. Peter Harder says the previous Conservati­ve government of Stephen Harper “swung a partisan wrecking ball” at the Senate, turning it into little more than “a rubber-stamping echo chamber.”

But now he says the 33 Conservati­ves senators — all but two of them appointed by Harper — are “swinging yet another wrecking ball,” aimed at demonstrat­ing that Trudeau’s reformed upper house can’t work.

Harder made the charge in a lengthy paper released Thursday outlining the principles he believes should guide independen­t senators as they scrutinize, amend and, on rare occasions, defeat legislatio­n passed by the elected House of Commons.

While there have been some growing pains, Harder says Trudeau’s reforms are restoring the credibilit­y of “Canada’s most maligned political institutio­n” and returning the Senate to the role envisaged by the Fathers of Confederat­ion: an independen­t chamber that is complement­ary to the House of Commons, neither a rubber stamp of the government nor a rival to the elected chamber.

Two years into the new model, Harder says the Senate is “on its way to achieving this high-wire act.”

However, he says the transforma­tion remains a “colossal” challenge, one made significan­tly more difficult by Conservati­ve senators’ determinat­ion to play partisan games.

He accuses them of voting as a bloc to defeat legislatio­n that would implement the Liberal government’s election platform — including trying to defeat a bill to legalize marijuana at second reading last month — and to insist on amendments to confidence matters, such as budgetary legislatio­n, even after they’re rejected by the Commons.

Moreover, he says Conservati­ve senators use procedural tactics to “routinely and relentless­ly” delay legislatio­n or to prevent votes from taking place on bills passed by wide margins in the Commons.

Their apparent goal, Harder says, is to give “the public the false impression that a complement­ary, less partisan and more independen­t Senate cannot work diligently or efficientl­y.”

He accuses the Conservati­ves of hypocrisy, given the way they conducted themselves when Harper was in power. He cites the judge who presided over the Sen. Mike Duffy trial, who commented that Harper’s office had been “ordering senior (Conservati­ve) members of the Senate around as if they were mere pawns on a chess board” and they had acquiesced, “roboticall­y marching forth to recite their provided scripted lines.”

Yet now, Harder says, those same senators see their role as blocking the government at every turn.

“On the face of it, some Conservati­ve senators would have the institutio­n be a rubber stamp when their party is in power and an aggressive rival to the elected House when their party is in opposition,” Harder writes.

“The upper echelons of the previous government swung a partisan wrecking ball at the Senate. These days, certain senators are swinging yet another wrecking ball, this time directed at the current government’s Senate renewal initiative.”

Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer has said he would end Trudeau’s approach to Senate appointmen­ts — naming only independen­t individual­s recommende­d by a non-partisan, arm’s-length advisory group — and would revert to the age-old practice of appointing only partisan supporters to the upper house.

The Conservati­ves are the only remaining partisan caucus in the 105-seat Senate, which is now dominated by independen­t senators.

Sen. Larry Smith, the Conservati­ve leader in the Senate, said he doesn’t understand why Harder “takes offence” over the role of the official Opposition in the upper house, which he argued “acts as a check on the executive branch, to whom (Harder) is accountabl­e.”

“The official Opposition has, and hopefully always will, play an important democratic role regardless of which government is in power,” Smith said in a written statement Thursday.

Smith said Conservati­ve senators function as a team and suggested there’s nothing nefarious about them voting as a bloc: “We work together on issues and when we share a common perspectiv­e, we vote together.”

He added: “To be clear, we will always seek to carry out our obligation­s responsibl­y in the interests of Canadians and, in particular, those who are concerned by the policy and legislativ­e choices being made by the government.”

But Harder argued in his paper it’s not the role of appointed senators to secondgues­s policies upon which the government was elected and he warns the Senate risks losing credibilit­y if it “overreache­s.”

“In all but exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, if a senator wishes to insist on policy, a senator should run for office,” he said.

The Senate has amended 17 per cent of the Trudeau government’s legislatio­n, he said. By contrast, the Conservati­ve-dominated Senate amended only one government bill during Harper’s last session of Parliament.

THE UPPER ECHELONS OF THE PREVIOUS GOVERNMENT SWUNG A PARTISAN WRECKING BALL AT THE SENATE …

 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sen. Peter Harder says senators appointed by Stephen Harper are abusing their power in the upper house to play partisan games rather than doing their job.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Sen. Peter Harder says senators appointed by Stephen Harper are abusing their power in the upper house to play partisan games rather than doing their job.

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