National Post (National Edition)

Liberals withdraw some rule proposals

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JOAN BRYDEN OTTAWA • The Trudeau government is backing down from some of its most controvers­ial proposals for reforming the way the House of Commons operates in the face of opposition filibuster­ing that has tied parliament­ary business in knots for weeks.

Government House leader Bardish Chagger has written to her opposition counterpar­ts, announcing that she intends to proceed with only those reforms promised in the Liberal election platform — including having the prime minister answer all queries in one question period each week, as Justin Trudeau has already begun doing.

Chagger is dropping other more contentiou­s proposals, which opposition parties have unanimousl­y denounced as a bid by the Liberals to control the parliament­ary agenda and hamstring their efforts to hold the government to account.

That includes a proposal to adopt the British practice to use “programmin­g motions” to set in advance the amount of time to be devoted to debate and committee study of each bill introduced in the Commons.

Also being abandoned is a proposal to limit MPs’ speeches during committee hearings to 10 minutes, short-circuiting their ability to filibuster.

However, Chagger warns in her letter that without those reforms the government will be forced instead to impose time allocation to limit debate and get legislatio­n passed.

“Canadians elected us to deliver an ambitious agenda, so it is with regret, but full transparen­cy, that I want to inform you that, under the circumstan­ces, the government will need to use time allocation more often in order to implement the real change we promised,” she says.

Chagger is also deferring a proposal to eliminate sparsely-attended, half-day Friday sittings of the Commons, asking opposition parties to consult their respective MPs on the idea of reallocati­ng the time now spent on Fridays to other days or weeks in the parliament­ary calendar.

Almost from the moment Chagger proposed the reforms in a discussion paper released in early March, opposition parties have been expressing outrage over what they described as a power grab by a dictatoria­l prime minister.

The discussion paper was sent to the procedure and House affairs committee, where a Liberal MP’s motion to study it and report back with recommenda­tions by June 2 set off a days-long filibuster, which eventually spilled over into the House of Commons.

Chagger’s retreat comes as the Commons prepares to resume Monday after a twoweek break. The government is hoping to get back to business-as-usual before Parliament breaks for the summer.

The surviving proposals were promised in the Liberals’ 2015 election platform and were meant to address perceived abuses by Harper’s Conservati­ve government.

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