Ottawa Citizen

Liberals derail probes in parliament­ary reset

- RYAN TUMILTY AND BRIAN PLATT in Ottawa

TRUDEAU ASKS TO PROROGUE PARLIAMENT UNTIL SEPT. 23

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau prorogued Parliament Tuesday, ending damaging committee investigat­ions into his government’s WE scandal and leaving the House of Commons on the sidelines during a global crisis.

Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer slammed the move, saying, “Justin Trudeau is walking out on Canadians in the middle of a major health and economic crisis, in a disgusting attempt to make Canadians forget about his corruption.

“At a time when Canadians are looking for stability and leadership, Justin Trudeau has given them corruption, chaos, and cover-ups.”

Trudeau said he had no choice but to suspend Parliament for more than five weeks, until Sept. 23, so his government could reset and introduce a new throne speech that reflected the challenges Canadians face with COVID-19.

“The throne speech will give us the opportunit­y to lay out in detail our approach going forward. It will also allow Parliament to hold a confidence vote on this new plan,” he said.

The prorogatio­n means the government will not be able to easily reconvene the House of Commons if new legislatio­n is required to deal with the pandemic. Parliament was only scheduled to sit one more time this summer, before returning on Sept. 21.

The house has sat infrequent­ly this year due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, with only a handful of sittings taking place to pass emergency legislatio­n since midMarch.

Jagmeet Singh, the NDP’s leader, said Canadians “shouldn’t be forced to pay the price for Mr. Trudeau’s scandals.”

“Shutting down Parliament in the middle of a pandemic and an economic crisis, with a planned sitting next week and committees working hard to get answers and solutions for Canadians is wrong,” he said.

Proroguing means the current session ends and a new one will start with a throne speech. Trudeau could have waited to prorogue until a day before the throne speech. Instead, by proroguing now, Parliament will be suspended for more than a month.

A prorogatio­n puts a stop to all ongoing parliament­ary work, including on proposed legislatio­n and any studies being done in committee.

Three parliament­ary committees — the finance, ethics, and government operations committees — had ongoing investigat­ions into the WE Charity scandal that will be halted by the prorogatio­n.

Trudeau said the finance committee will still receive about 5,000 pages of documents related to the scandal for MPs to review. However, the committee will not be able to meet again until Parliament resumes. At that point, the committee can choose to resume its work where it left off.

Trudeau’s use of prorogatio­n Tuesday is in stark contrast to his position on the issue in 2015, when the Liberals complained in their platform about then-prime minister Stephen Harper’s use of the legislativ­e tool.

“Stephen Harper has used prorogatio­n to avoid difficult political circumstan­ces. We will not,” read the platform.

Trudeau insisted his use of prorogatio­n was different.

“Stephen Harper and the Conservati­ves prorogued Parliament in order to shut it down and avoid a confidence vote,” he said. “We are proroguing Parliament to bring it back, exactly the same week it was supposed to come back anyway, and force a confidence vote.”

Trudeau said the pandemic had been a tremendous challenge, but it also presented the country with an opportunit­y to make a greener, more prosperous and fairer society.

“This is our chance to build a more resilient Canada, a Canada that is healthier and safer, greener and more competitiv­e, a Canada that is more welcoming, and more fair. This is our moment to change the future.”

He said the pandemic had exposed cracks in society that the country could no longer ignore.

“We need to get through this pandemic in a way that gives everyone a real and fair chance at success, not just the wealthiest one per cent.”

Trudeau said the throne speech the government introduced in December last year no longer matched the reality of what was in front of Canadians. He promised an ambitious plan and said it was only right MPs have a chance to weigh in.

“We need a mandate from this Parliament to move forward on implementi­ng these ambitious ideals. And it’s important that we have an opportunit­y to debate it.”

The now scheduled throne speech will be a confidence vote, the first major test of the government’s support in this minority Parliament. If Parliament votes to reject the government’s agenda, a new election may be triggered. In the current minority, that would require the Conservati­ves, Bloc Québécois and NDP to vote in unison.

The Bloc Québécois said in a statement in French that if the purpose of the prorogatio­n was to put a lid on the WE Charity scandal, it would not work. But the Bloc also said it would be watching Trudeau’s plan going forward to see if it helped Quebecers.

Bloc leader Yves-François Blanchet already said last week that he intended to vote for a new election if Trudeau did not resign over the WE Charity scandal.

However, on Tuesday he said it was possible he would support the throne speech if it included his demands. Those demands include additional support for seniors, more compensati­on for farmers under supply management, and Quebec government control over the Quebec portion of the student volunteer grant program.

The Conservati­ves are in a trickier position, given they haven’t yet elected a new leader to replace Scheer.

But a new leader is scheduled to be announced this coming Sunday and whoever they are could decide to go to the polls immediatel­y.

Singh, meanwhile, was non-committal on Tuesday when asked if he would support a new election.

“If the Liberal government continues to focus on helping their close friends instead of helping people, if they continue to be caught up in fighting themselves instead of helping families that are worried about their future, then we’ll have to look at all options,” he said.

Trudeau said he was not trying to prompt an election by holding a new throne speech in September. “No, we do not want an election,” Trudeau said. “But it is obvious that the throne speech we gave eight months ago is no longer relevant for the reality that Canadians are living and that our government is facing.”

He said whenever the opposition parties force a trip to the polls, he will lead his party again.

“There are a lot of challenges Canada is facing right now. And I’m actually excited about the opportunit­y and the responsibi­lity.”

HARPER HAS USED PROROGATIO­N TO AVOID DIFFICULT POLITICAL CIRCUMSTAN­CES. WE

WILL NOT.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on as new Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland responds to a question at a news conference in Ottawa on Tuesday.
ADRIAN WYLD / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on as new Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland responds to a question at a news conference in Ottawa on Tuesday.
 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Chrystia Freeland is sworn in as finance minister by Clerk of the Privy Council Ian Shugart at Rideau Hall
in Ottawa on Tuesday, marking the first time Canada has named a woman to that key portfolio.
SEAN KILPATRICK / THE CANADIAN PRESS Chrystia Freeland is sworn in as finance minister by Clerk of the Privy Council Ian Shugart at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Tuesday, marking the first time Canada has named a woman to that key portfolio.

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