Medicine Hat News

Gov’t threatens to cut off Senate debate on pot as July deadline looms

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The Trudeau government is moving to ensure the Senate doesn’t hold up its plans to legalize recreation­al marijuana in July.

The government’s representa­tive in the upper house, Sen. Peter Harder, served notice Tuesday that he wants second reading debate on Bill C-45 wrapped up by March 1, after which it would go to committee for detailed examinatio­n before returning to the chamber for a final debate and vote.

If the various Senate factions won’t agree to that timetable, Harder warned he’ll move a motion to impose time allocation to cut off debate — the first time he’s threatened to resort to that tactic since taking on the role of government representa­tive two years ago.

“My fear, quite frankly, is that March 1 would come and we may see the sort of procedural obstructio­n we have seen from senators in this Parliament on multiple items of business,” he told his fellow senators.

Harder aimed his remarks primarily at Conservati­ve senators, whom he said have been instructed by their party’s leader, Andrew Scheer, to use “all the democratic tools” available to “block” the bill.

Conservati­ve Senate Leader Larry Smith last week denied his senators plan to be “obstructio­nist” but he said they will insist on a thorough examinatio­n of the legislatio­n.

C-45 has been before the Senate since November and so far only one Conservati­ve senator has joined the debate. The Conservati­ve critic for the bill, Sen. Claude Carignan has yet to speak.

Barring the imposition of time allocation, Senate rules allow debate to be delayed indefinite­ly as long as a single senator still wants to speak.

Harder’s threat to cut off debate comes a week after Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor told senators that provincial government­s will need two to three months after the bill receives royal assent to prepare for retail sales of cannabis.

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