The Walrus

Why Politician­s Should Challenge the Party Line

- by Elizabeth Goodyear-grant

“THE TRUST THAT PREVIOUSLY

existed between these two individual­s and our team has been broken,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a press conference this April, announcing his decision to remove two high-pro le members of his government, Jody Wilson-raybould and Jane Philpott, from the Liberal caucus. “The old Liberal Party was notorious for in ghting....my leadership was a commitment to change that.”

This spring’s political controvers­y made waves for many reasons, and at least one was not novel: Canada’s political parties hold loyalty to be a, and perhaps the, central virtue. Members of Parliament virtually never vote against their parties, for example, even on the rare occasions when free votes permit them to. In this, Canada is typical of parliament­ary systems, which all tend to have high levels of party unity.

Canadian political commenters often lament what they describe as a particular­ly rigid system here, one in which MPS are expected to hew unusually and unreasonab­ly close to their leaders, but Canada actually hovers around the median level of party legislativ­e cohesivene­ss. Until recently, fewer than 1 percent of UK MPS dissented from their party’s stance in recorded votes; the chaotic Brexit votes are not the norm. Studies of Canada’s Parliament have found similar rates.

MPS were not always so dependable. The near total unity we see today did not fully emerge in Canada until the second half of the twentieth century. There are several reasons for this, but a big one is the emergence of new political parties in the post– Second World War era — the Bloc populaire canadien, the (later the ), and Social Credit, among others — that attracted some factions that had previously been active within the Liberal and Conservati­ve parties. This meant there were fewer dissenters in the two traditiona­l “big tent” parties; partisan sorting and self-selection were big in uences on the emergence of the near-perfect unity we are now familiar with. Since then, it has been a distinguis­hing feature of our politics and a persistent source of dissatisfa­ction for citizens and media commenters — not to mention MPS themselves — who not infrequent­ly use labels like “trained seal” and “rubber stamp” to describe MP behaviour.

Despite Canadians’ displeasur­e, it is voters who bear some blame for this state of a airs. MPS who defy their parties — by voting against the party line, publicly criticizin­g their party or leader, resigning from caucus to sit as independen­ts, or crossing the oor to join another party — face the possibilit­y of punishment from not only parties but also constituen­ts. The voting public may say it does not want MPS who are unquestion­ingly loyal to their leaders or who defect to rival parties, but it also shies from independen­ts, who are rarely elected. Facing punishment at the ballot box, MPS, it will come as no surprise, are reluctant to break rank.

Parties and leaders are also responsibl­e for a great deal of this, of course. They could enhance the autonomy of MPS and, in doing so, shift the balance between local representa­tion and party unity in Ottawa. Increasing the number of free votes in the House is another obvious option for accomplish­ing this. In 2015, the Trudeau Liberals campaigned on a promise to declare all votes free unless they dealt with items in their platform, traditiona­l con dence items (such as the budget), or items that “address our shared values and the protection­s guaranteed by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.” Despite the rhetorical appeal of such a promise, few free votes have occurred. Stephen Harper also promised but did not deliver more free votes. Instead, his style was notoriousl­y centralize­d and his caucus quite discipline­d.

A loosening of party unity could infuse new ideas into the legislativ­e process, make debate and dissent more transparen­t, and strengthen relationsh­ips between constituen­ts and MPS. There is nothing inevitable or irredeemab­le about the rigidity of the current system. It has evolved due to incentives and structures that we have the power to in uence or change — no irreparabl­e damage to the function of responsibl­e government will follow.

There are virtues and pitfalls either way; there is no clear consensus about which course yields more e ective government­s. But any party leader of any political stripe who suggests that it cannot be helped, that of course they’d like to allow more exibility and independen­ce within caucus but the edi ce of governance would simply come crashing to a halt, is simply making a choice of convenienc­e and convention. They could do otherwise.

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