Vancouver Sun

Liberals, Tories spar over ‘virtual’ Parliament

- RYAN TUMILTY

been technical issues, participan­ts who can’t be heard, as well as problems with simultaneo­us translatio­n.

Conservati­ves say they are concerned the same technical issues will confound the virtual Parliament as well Liberals, speaking on background, say they’re also concerned an in-person Parliament would send the wrong message about the need for social distancing and risk exposing senior cabinet members, who are needed in this crisis, to COVID-19.

However, Conservati­ve House Leader Candice Bergen said there is no reason the Commons can’t sit in a reduced form.

“Ministers hold daily press conference­s in a room steps from the House of Commons. The HoC is a large room that can allow for physical distancing,” she said the government welcomes the scrutiny of the Opposition, but wants to convene a virtual Parliament with more participan­ts.

“It’s important that parliament­arians from every corner of the country, not just those within driving distance of Ottawa, should be able to weigh in on the working of our democracy. That’s why we’re looking at virtual models for doing that,” he said.

In a letter released Wednesday, Speaker Anthony Rota concluded a model could be up within four weeks.

The details of the virtual Parliament are still unclear.

Since Parliament last sat, the House of Commons’ finance and health committees have both convened — by teleconfer­ence — regularly to discuss the crisis. But like any teleconfer­ence there have OTTAWA • Critical wage subsidy legislatio­n is being held up as the Conservati­ve and Liberals spar over just how the House of Commons will hold the government to account during the COVID-19 crisis.

The big sticking point is that Liberals want a “virtual” Parliament while the Conservati­ves want to have Parliament come back in person but with reduced numbers and regular sittings.

The issue is delaying the passing of the $73-billion wage subsidy legislatio­n that must be approved before cheques to businesses can start flowing.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said on Twitter. “If Ministers can hold press conference­s safely, there is no reason for them or the PM to avoid accountabi­lity in the House.”

She said Conservati­ves want Parliament to have a meaningful role.

The wage subsidy proposal will cover up to 75 per cent of an employee’s wages, allowing employers to keep them on the payroll.

The Liberals had a wage subsidy in their first financial package for COVID-19 relief, but it was much more limited and new legislatio­n is required for the broader package.

The actual legislatio­n is not a major sticking point, but the debate around how to hold the government accountabl­e going forward is a challenge.

As of early Wednesday evening a deal had not been reached to bring Parliament back for that session, but it could come soon.

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