National Post

Trudeau’s multi-caucus Senate comes with a cost

Legislatio­n would codify leadership roles

- Ryan Tumilty National Post rtumilty@postmedia.com Twitter: Ryantumilt­y

• The unaligned Senate that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau first created when he pushed Liberal senators out of the party’s caucus will be cemented with new legislatio­n that will also make the red chamber more costly.

When he first became Liberal leader, Trudeau moved to kick Liberal senators out of the party’s caucus, meaning they no longer meet regularly with Liberal MPS and don’t have a formal role in the party’s legislativ­e agenda.

When he became prime minister, Trudeau changed the appointmen­t process for the Senate, making it more independen­t and new senators appointed to the chamber have mostly sat with the Independen­t Senators Group.

The ISG is the largest group in the chamber with 42 members. It is followed by the Conservati­ves, the last party caucus in the Senate, with 20 and the Canadian

Senators Group and the Progressiv­e Senate Group each with 12.

The ISG, Canadian and Progressiv­e groups aren’t connected to political parties in the House of Commons.

Using his new process, Trudeau has appointed nearly half of the 105 senators in the chamber, with 51 senators coming in during his tenure and with 14 current vacancies the new process will soon be responsibl­e for selecting more than half of the Senate.

Since Trudeau no longer has a caucus in the Senate, there are three senators acting as the government’s representa­tive, deputy representa­tive and liaison, helping to move legislatio­n through the chamber.

The new bill would codify those positions as well as create positions for leaders and deputy leaders of all the Senate groups.

Sen. Yuen Pau Woo, who is the facilitato­r or leader of the ISG, said the bill is codifying what already exists.

“The most important thing is the recognitio­n that the Senate is made up of groups, other than the government and the opposition, and that these other groups, self-identify as non-partisan,” he said.

The new legislatio­n comes with a cost as well; in addition to the base pay senators get of approximat­ely $160,000, there are currently top ups for the government’s representa­tive and the leader of opposition of just over $42,000.

On top of those payments, the new legislatio­n would offer the other caucus leaders top-ups on their pay, with someone in Woo’s position getting an additional $42,000 and the leaders of other Senate caucuses getting $21,000 boosts. Woo himself will not receive the increase payments even if the bill passes, because his term as facilitato­r ends this year and the raises would not kick in until 2022.

Woo, though conscious of the cost, argued the raises make sense because the leaders of these new Senate groups are doing the work. He also notes party leaders in the House of Commons get a pay raise.

“The addition of these paid positions is necessary as a matter of fairness, because, the leaders of these other groups perform essentiall­y the same duties as the leaders of the government or the opposition,” he said.

Sen. Peter Harder, who was the government’s representa­tive in the Senate until last year, said it is time to

recognize the Senate isn’t the same as it was.

“Five years ago when I arrived, there were just what they called unaffiliat­ed senators that weren’t either Liberal or Conservati­ves and now you have only one group that is identified with a political name,” he said

During debate last week, Conservati­ve Sen. Denise Batters argued the bill seems to make the opposition less important in the Senate, reducing it to just one of several groups in the Senate.

“Bill S-4 seems to dilute

these key powers of the opposition and its important historical role,” she said.

Harder said the opposition will still have a sizable role in the new Senate and he believes the new bill is only a small change.

“I think the whole progress has been made because it’s been respectful and evolutiona­ry rather than revolution­ary.”

Both Harder and Woo said they expect there are more changes that may come to pass in the Senate as it asserts more independen­ce

and becomes less political.

In a poll released Monday, 80 per cent of Canadians believe having senators sit independen­tly from a political party is a good change.

The poll conducted by Nanos research was commission­ed by Senator Donna Dasko, a former pollster herself. It also found 67 per cent of Canadians believe the new independen­t applicatio­n process is an improvemen­t.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Sen. Peter Harder, formerly the government representa­tive in the Senate and now affiliated with the Progressiv­e Senate Group, says the legislatio­n recognizes that the
way the Senate operates has evolved, and he expects more changes may come.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Sen. Peter Harder, formerly the government representa­tive in the Senate and now affiliated with the Progressiv­e Senate Group, says the legislatio­n recognizes that the way the Senate operates has evolved, and he expects more changes may come.

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