Acceptability of Motions to sit in Camera. Speaker
Richard Guay, Quebec National Assembly, December 16, 1983
Background: At times the end of a long session
or in the course of extended debate, members do or say things which despite the
best efforts of presiding officers can only bring the institution into
disrepute. On such occasions there may be a temptation for members to
move that the House go into secret session to exclude the public. A
motion to this effect was introduced by th4Deputy Oppositi0o House Leader at
5:50 am on Friday December 16, 1983. The House had been sitting since
10:00 am on Thursday debating a motion that the Standing Committee on Municipal
Affairs table by Friday at 12:00 pm its report on An Act Respecting
Government Funding of Municipalities
The Ruling (Speaker Richard Guay): Motions to sit in
camera have a well established place in out parliamentary customs and
traditions.
There are instances of parliamentary committees which sit in
camera for all or part of their work. However, in this case and it is so
in other Parliaments following similar procedures, the objective of such
notions is not to exclude the public but to ensure confidentiality of
information revealed which could prove embarrassing to persons or compromise
the security of the state. The exclusion of the public is not the goal of
in camera meetings
Were the Assembly to sit in camera it would mean no one
would be allowed in the galleries, journalists would be excluded, television
coverage would be interrupted and the verbatim transcript would either be
unrecorded or if it was recorded would not be published in the Journal des
Débats. Any violations of secrecy could be taken up under
rules protecting the privileges of the Assembly. Thus it would seem that there
should be exceptional circumstances before the Assembly have recourse to in
camera meetings.
A motion to sit in camera is not a dilatory motion; it
becomes one very quickly if every members invokes it on the grounds that the Assembly
must decide the question after debate.
The Assembly has the undoubted right to decide the issue but
for it to be considered I believe there must be circumstances which pram facie
seem to justify it; in other words the motion can only be proposed if the
nature of the deliberation is likely to compromise persons or groups or the
security of the state or for other similar reasons.
Common sense demands that a motion with such serious
consequences not be reduced to a means of delaying debate in the Assembly.
Furthermore article 47 is ambiguous as to the moment such a motion can be
introduced. In the old standing orders it had to be introduced after
prayers and before opening the doors to the public. In those days as is still
the case in Ottawa, prayers were held in private. Thus a motion to sit in
camera occurred before the public ever entered the chamber. Without
making a definitive statement on this aspect of the question it would seem very
likely that the motion must come at the beginning of the session and not during
the course of the proceedings.
In any event if in camera sittings are going to be held
there must be a large consensus among the groups represented otherwise
confidential information will not stay that way for long.
The motion by the member from Portneuf, coming after more
than eight hours of debate is out of order because there are no circumstances
which, prima facie, lead one to think that continuation of debate would give
rise to a situation in which the Assembly might justifiably sit in camera
The motion is out of Order