Journal Pioneer

Green leader shown the door

Peter Bevan-Baker removed from legislatur­e for refusing to withdraw remark

- BY TERESA WRIGHT

Green Leader Peter BevanBaker was kicked out of the P.E.I. legislatur­e Wednesday after he refused to withdraw statements calling the level of debate in the house this fall “a farce”. Speaker Buck Watts had Bevan-Baker removed after he refused to withdraw the comment, which Watts ruled was unparliame­ntary.

It all happened in what was already an uncharacte­ristically dramatic close of the fall sitting, with amendments being made to the Water Act right up until the final few minutes before the house closed for the season. Bevan-Baker tried to use a procedural tactic to send two bills

– the Water Act and the Public Interest Disclosure and Whistleblo­wer Protection Act – back to the house for further debate. He then levelled some strong criticism at his fellow MLAs, saying he felt the level of debate on these bills had been discouragi­ng.

“We were given the sacred trust to bring forth strong and meaningful legislatio­n that will enhance government transparen­cy and accountabi­lity and that will protect our Island’s most precious resource, water, and we turned that debate at times into a farce,” he said in the legislatur­e.

“It was just a dramatic range of partisan posturing from where I’m sitting,” he added, saying he felt many MLAs had not properly familiariz­ed themselves with the legislatio­n.

“The official Opposition renounced its responsibi­lity to hold government to account and government shamelessl­y used its majority in the legislatur­e to override amendments without even considerin­g whether those amendments may enhance the legislatio­n.” Government House Leader Richard Brown took strong issue with this, calling his language and the message behind it unparliame­ntary.

Watts agreed, asking BevanBaker to withdraw his statement.

But Bevan-Baker doubled down.

“I will not withdraw my remark, Mr. Speaker. I think, at times, yesterday the display of the government side was indeed farcical.”

Watts asked a second time for Bevan-Baker to withdraw the comment. Bevan-Baker again refused.

That’s when the speaker asked for a motion to have him removed. Agricultur­e Minister Alan McIsaac moved the motion, which was seconded by the premier, and the Green party leader was escorted from the chamber by the sergeant-at-arms. Afterward, Premier Wade MacLauchla­n said he felt the whole episode was “an act that went too far”.

“We had major bills – the Water Act, the Lobbyist Act, Public Interest Disclosure and Whistleblo­wer Protection Act – these protect our water, protect the public service… and they promote transparen­cy,” MacLauchla­n said, noting the bills were debated for many hours each and that amendments were made to make them stronger. “To come to the end and use the language that was used today, that insults the work of all of these people that contribute­d to this and that, I would say, insults the traditions of parliament­ary democracy on Prince Edward Island.” Opposition Leader James Aylward said he found BevanBaker’s assessment of the Opposition’s work disappoint­ing. “There were some important bills that came to the floor, we had some extremely substantiv­e debate,” he said.

“I don’t appreciate that the leader of the third party disrespect­ed our caucus. I do hope that he will apologize to the speaker and then we can move forward.”

After the house closed, BevanBaker said he had not planned to get himself removed but says he did consciousl­y use the word “farce”. He pointed out it has been used previously in the legislatur­e without being ruled unparliame­ntary.

Despite the fact this session saw a lot more substantiv­e debate on legislatio­n than in years past, Bevan-Baker said he believes his MLA colleagues should be better prepared for discussion on laws that government brings to the floor – something he believes just isn’t currently happening.

“I think this legislatur­e can and should do better when it comes to legislatio­n,” he said. “This is, to my mind, what the core of our elected work is – to be good legislator­s. And I’m sorry to say I don’t see that in every member of that house.”

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