Close X
Saturday, December 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

PM Harper Meets Abolition Champ Wall As Pressure Rises To Articulate Plan For Senate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Jul, 2015 12:29 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper will meet today with Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall to discuss forest fires but he may find himself trying to douse the flames of another disaster: the Senate.
     
    Proximity to Wall, who champions abolition of the scandal-plagued upper house, will doubtless raise questions about Harper's own plans for the discredited chamber.
     
    The prime minister threw in the towel last year on his three-decade crusade for an elected Senate after the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that reforming the chamber would require a constitutional amendment approved by at least seven provinces with 50 per cent of the population (the so-called 7/50 amending formula).
     
    The top court set the bar even higher for abolition, Harper's fallback position should reform prove impossible. Getting rid of the Senate altogether, the court advised, would require unanimous provincial consent.
     
    At the time, Harper said the court had essentially pronounced “that significant reform and abolition are off the table.”  
     
    “We know that there is no consensus among the provinces on reform, no consensus on abolition, and no desire of anyone to reopen the Constitution and have a bunch of constitutional negotiations.”
     
    A year earlier, as the Senate was engulfed in scandal over allegedly improperly claimed living and travel expenses, Harper stopped appointing senators. There are now 22 vacancies, which the prime minister has shown no inclination to fill any time soon — almost certainly not before the Oct. 19 federal election.
     
    However, the Supreme Court has also made it clear that allowing vacancies to pile up can't go on indefinitely since it would amount to abolition by stealth.
     
     
    Section 42 of the Constitution specifies that the powers of the Senate and the number of senators for each province are among those things that can be changed only by a 7/50 amendment, the court noted in its 2014 landmark ruling.
     
    That section "presupposes the continuing existence of a Senate and makes no room for an indirect abolition of the Senate," the court said. "It is outside the scope of s. 42 to altogether strip the Senate of its powers and reduce the number of senators to zero."
     
    As the election looms and the Senate scandal continues to go from bad to worse in the wake of a devastating audit that flagged inappropriate expense claims by 30 more senators, Harper's inaction has become increasingly untenable.
     
    The pressure to articulate some sort of plan is likely to increase next month when the fraud and bribery trial of disgraced Sen. Mike Duffy resumes. Harper's one-time chief of staff Nigel Wright is slated to take the stand to explain his role in giving Duffy $90,000 to repay his disputed expense claims.
     
    Harper's main opponents have plans for the upper chamber: NDP Leader Tom Mulcair is vowing to abolish the Senate, despite the constitutional hurdles; Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau has booted senators from his party's caucus and is promising, if elected, to create an independent advisory body to recommend non-partisan nominees to the Senate.
     
    Harper has accused Mulcair of promising abolition, "knowing that isn't going to happen" because too many provinces, including Quebec and Ontario, don't support it. And he's accused Trudeau of wanting to set up an unelected, unaccountable body to recommend appointees to the unelected, unaccountable Senate. He's also rejected calls to free his own Conservative senators to sit as independent senators.
     
    Having ridiculed his opponents' alternatives, he's left himself little room to propose anything other than the status quo.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    More Than 60 Cats Rescued From Toronto Apartment Need Urgent Medical Attention

    More Than 60 Cats Rescued From Toronto Apartment Need Urgent Medical Attention
    Toronto Cat Rescue says the Ragdoll and Himalayan cats were removed from a one-bedroom apartment by Toronto Animal Services and brought to the shelter last week.

    More Than 60 Cats Rescued From Toronto Apartment Need Urgent Medical Attention

    Liberal Candidate Sven Spengemann Investigated For Failing To Report All Nomination Expenses

    Liberal Candidate Sven Spengemann Investigated For Failing To Report All Nomination Expenses
    OTTAWA — A Liberal candidate is under investigation by the commissioner of elections for failing to report all the expenses he racked up to win a hotly contested nomination battle.

    Liberal Candidate Sven Spengemann Investigated For Failing To Report All Nomination Expenses

    Canadian Officer Involved In Polish Immigrant's Electroshock Death Gets 2 Years For Perjury

    Canadian Officer Involved In Polish Immigrant's Electroshock Death Gets 2 Years For Perjury
    Robert Dziekanski died at Vancouver International Airport after being shocked five times with a Taser stun gun by police in an incident that was viewed around the world after the release of a witness' amateur video.

    Canadian Officer Involved In Polish Immigrant's Electroshock Death Gets 2 Years For Perjury

    Meet Rotimatic, World’s First Robot Roti Maker By India-Born Engineer

    Meet Rotimatic, World’s First Robot Roti Maker By India-Born Engineer
    An Indian-origin engineer in Singapore who invented an automatic one-minute roti maker machine seven years back has now fetched a second round of investment of $11.5 million from venture firms, a media report said.

    Meet Rotimatic, World’s First Robot Roti Maker By India-Born Engineer

    Killer Whale Stranded On B.C. Rocks Nursed For 8 Hours Before Rising Tide

    Killer Whale Stranded On B.C. Rocks Nursed For 8 Hours Before Rising Tide
    Hermann Meuter, who runs a whale research facility near Hartley Bay, says another researcher watched a pod of killer whales hunting seals Wednesday and noticed that a female orca was stranded on the rocks.

    Killer Whale Stranded On B.C. Rocks Nursed For 8 Hours Before Rising Tide

    B.C. Desert Mayor Urges New Thinking On Water Use Across The Province

    B.C. Desert Mayor Urges New Thinking On Water Use Across The Province
    The mayor of a desert town in British Columbia says people across the province need to develop a different mindset over water use in the face of current drought-like conditions.

    B.C. Desert Mayor Urges New Thinking On Water Use Across The Province

    PrevNext