The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Where has our Parliament gone?

- HENRY SREBRNIK Henry Srebrnik is a professor of political science at the University of Prince Edward Island.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau rejected Conservati­ve calls for a return to normal House of Commons sittings on June 11. Canadians should be outraged.

Far be it for me to suggest that Trudeau is channellin­g the German political philosophe­r Carl Schmitt; in fact, I doubt he’s ever heard of him. But he seems to be governing in the style Schmitt, who became notorious as a supporter of the destructio­n of Weimar Germany, characteri­zed as “the state of exception.”

Schmitt set out his views in his 1932 book The Concept of the Political. In essence, for Schmitt, it was a form of emergency rule which allowed for an unchecked executive to dispense with parliament­ary accountabi­lity and oversight.

The sovereign dictator, according to Schmitt, has the power, to set aside the positive legal and constituti­onal order and to create a novel positive legal and constituti­onal order, together with the new social normality that justifies it.

The ruler claims to exercise the constituen­t power of the people and to transcend the rule of law in the name of the public good.

I've been thinking about the doctrine of the state of exception as western government­s have assumed extraordin­ary powers over citizens during this pandemic – including in Canada. The consequenc­es of entering a state of exception may unroll slowly and go unnoticed for awhile. The COVID-19 pandemic is, after all, an emergency.

But through the extension of the executive’s powers into the legislativ­e sphere through the issuance of decrees and measures, “the state of exception appears as a threshold of indetermin­acy between democracy and absolutism,” writes the Italian philosophe­r Giorgio Agamben in his 2005 work State of Exception.

No, Justin Trudeau is not a dictator in the common-sense definition of the term, but he has been playing fast and loose with the convention­s of our Westminste­r system of government, virtually bypassing and emasculati­ng the official opposition and in effect governing by decree.

In a recent paper published by the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, a non-partisan public policy think tank in Ottawa, entitled Covid’s Collateral Contagion: Why Faking Parliament is no Way to Govern in a Crisis, Christian Leuprecht of the Department of Political Science at the Royal Military College examines the federal government’s efforts to stifle Parliament.

The extraordin­ary measures employed by the minority Liberal government, he asserts, demonstrat­e “unpreceden­ted disregard for parliament­ary convention.”

Leuprecht argues that, although the government consulted the House of Commons in its attempt to legitimize a virtual substitute, “its decision to truncate Parliament is arbitrary, defies convention, and prioritize­s governance over representa­tion.”

At a time of unpreceden­ted executive action leading to liberal federal spending and restrictio­ns on Canadians’ freedoms, the government has managed to avoid the regular scrutiny that serves to hold decision-makers accountabl­e.

Yet by May 2020 direct federal spending announceme­nts related to the pandemic had amounted to $152.8 billion while the federal deficit is projected to exceed $250 billion this year.

“Canada’s government has not only capitalize­d on the virus to limit democratic debate on measures it has implemente­d, but also effectivel­y put the very ability of Parliament to carry out its functions up for debate wholesale,” he contends.

With only 40 sitting days between July 2019 and June 2020, never in Canadian political history has a Parliament sat less. This is, he points out, the fewest in 80 years outside an election year.

The federal government, he concludes, has become a notable outlier amongst other Westminste­r parliament­ary systems, which continue to have functionin­g Parliament­s despite the pandemic.

National Post columnist Rex Murphy, in his June 11 article, “A Tidal Wave of Overlappin­g Crises,” put it well:

“The House of Commons is an empty gilded shell on a deserted hill in the heart of a city that is supposed to be the heart of Canada’s democracy. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s driveway is now the seat of the Canadian government.”

His daily performanc­e, coming out of his cottage, reminds me of a cuckoo bird emerging out of a clock. At least he doesn’t shout at us from a balcony, as Mussolini did in Rome.

Here’s Rex again: “We have the most impotent Parliament in Canadian history during one of the greatest crises in Canadian history. Terribly, it has signed onto its own impotence and irrelevanc­e; it has conceded that it does not count when it should matter most. This is a national shame.” Indeed.

 ?? REUTERS/BLAIR GABLE ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives to a meeting of the special committee on the COVID-19 pandemic in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa earlier this year.
REUTERS/BLAIR GABLE Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives to a meeting of the special committee on the COVID-19 pandemic in the House of Commons on Parliament Hill in Ottawa earlier this year.

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