Cape Breton Post

Liberals to limit debate, accuse Tories of delaying climate bill

Opposition parties decry handcuffin­g committee deliberati­ons

- BRIAN PLATT

OTTAWA — With a two-week deadline looming before the House of Commons rises for the summer, the Liberals are hinting they may move to cut off committee debate on their netzero emissions legislatio­n, Bill C-12, in order to combat a Conservati­ve attempt to talk out the clock and prevent the bill’s passage.

If it happens, the move would come just days after the Liberals and Bloc voted to curtail committee debate on Bill C-10, the legislatio­n to regulate online platforms. The Conservati­ves, NDP and Green Party have all protested that this marks the first time in 20 years the House of Commons has used time allocation to handcuff committee deliberati­on, where expert witnesses testify on legislatio­n and amendments are considered.

Environmen­tal groups are growing concerned Bill C-12 won’t pass, with the David Suzuki Foundation, Centre québécois du droit de l’environnem­ent, Climate Action Network Canada, Ecojustice, Équiterre, and West Coast Environmen­tal Law issuing a joint letter to MPS on the committee this week urging them to get the bill through Parliament.

Party house leaders have been negotiatin­g over the legislatio­n, and it’s not yet clear exactly how the Liberals will proceed.

The Liberals accuse the Conservati­ves of deliberate­ly “slow-walking” Bill C-12 at the committee stage, making repeated lengthy interventi­ons so there isn’t time to pass the bill by summer. The Liberals themselves have filibuster­ed numerous committees over the past year, talking endlessly to prevent certain votes from going forward (such as votes on compelling document disclosure on the WE Charity affair.)

All parties are anticipati­ng the possibilit­y of a fall election, which would mean any legislatio­n not passed by the summer would die on the order paper — and might never be revived, depending how the election turns out.

On Wednesday, Environmen­t Minister Jonathan Wilkinson published a letter to NDP leader Jagmeet Singh and Bloc Quebecois leader Yves-françois Blanchet asking them to support the use of “the parliament­ary tools available to ensure this bill advances to the Senate of Canada for considerat­ion as soon as possible.”

“It should be clear to all of you at this point that the Conservati­ve Party will use every procedural tactic at its disposal to obstruct climate accountabi­lity legislatio­n,” Wilkinson’s letter said, noting the committee has had 12 hours of debate on amendments on Bill C-12 and is still only halfway done.

Bill C-12 would require the federal government to set national targets for reducing emissions and establishe­s a planning, reporting and assessment process for achieving net-zero emissions by 2050.

The Conservati­ves initially supported the legislatio­n, but changed course and voted against it after seeing the membership of a group advising the federal government on how to achieve net-zero by 2050. The Conservati­ves say they weren’t consulted on the group’s membership and protest that it has no representa­tion from the oil and gas industry.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Environmen­t and Climate Change Minister Jonathan Wilkinson attends a news conference at the Dominion Arboretum in Ottawa last Dec. 11.
REUTERS Environmen­t and Climate Change Minister Jonathan Wilkinson attends a news conference at the Dominion Arboretum in Ottawa last Dec. 11.

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