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Gary O'Brien
In May 2006, the Government introduced Bill S-4 to limit the tenure of
Senators to eight years instead of to age 75. A Special Senate Committee
considered the subject matter of this bill and presented its report in
October 2006. In December the Senate Appointments Consultations Act (Bill
C-43) was introduced in the House of Commons. It provides an opportunity
for voters to indicate a preference during federal elections for who they
would like to see appointed to the Senate. Although neither law has yet
been adopted, this article considers the impact of the proposed changes
on the functioning of committees of the Upper House.
The work of Senate committees is often explained through use of a constitutional
model. Under this model, the Senate has three essential characteristics:
(1) senators are not elected: therefore any claim by Senate committees
to political authority is weak; (2) the Senate is not a confidence chamber
and the government is not accountable to it: therefore Senate committees
focus on policy studies not partisan politics; and (3) the financial initiative
is legally awarded to the House of Commons: therefore Senate committees
usually restrict themselves to technical as opposed to substantial amendments
to bills. One should expect if the constitutional model of the Senate is
altered in any significant way either formally or informally, it will have
an impact on how committees function.
It must be kept in mind that change to the committee system can come about
without formal constitutional amendment. For example, in the early 1960s
only two or three Senate committees had regular meetings and called only
a few hundred witnesses each year mostly public servants. Today there are
approximately 20 active Senate committees which call on average 1200 witnesses
each year, over two thirds being from the non-governmental sector. These
differences resulted not from constitutional amendment but from changes
to Senate practice and attitude toward the importance of committee work.
However, our legislative history reminds us that altering the constitutional
model can have an impact on committees. Before the coming of responsible
government, both Upper and Lower Canada had an elaborate system of committees.
In the 1820-21 session, the House of Assembly of Lower Canada created 100
select committees. In 1825, the legislature of Upper Canada established
58. One of the first actions taken by the United Province of Canada in
1841 was to abolish the previous system of standing committees. The Attorney
General of the day said that he looked upon the appointment of standing
committees as an absolute departure from the practice of what the house
chose to call responsible government. Committees of privilege and contingencies,
ministers did not object to but if ministers were to carry out the principles
of responsible government then the important objects of trade and commerce
should be submitted to them. A backbencher (Mr. Durand) in a response
that captured the dilemma of parliamentary government for many years to
come replied that from what had fallen from the honourable and learned
gentlemen, he would suppose that it is the intention of the Attorney General
to monopolize the whole business of the House. If this was going to be
the case, he was convinced that the system of responsible government would
not work well.1
As is described in the literature on the Senate2, the defining characteristics
of Senate committees are the following. Many senators are quite knowledgeable
about their work. They are not just policy generalists but experts in their
fields and can recognize the potential impact of legislation. For most,
committee work is their first priority. Senators come from diverse backgrounds
and are very active representing minority interests which is demonstrated
in the questioning of witnesses and the choice of orders of reference.
Their workways are efficient because (1) they have more time to devote
to committee studies (2) they do not adopt restrictive procedures and (3)
the Senate has only two recognized parties allowing greater flexibility
in arranging committee business. Senators as well have an independent mind
set and a history of more voting against their party than is the case in
the House of Commons. Finally, based on their track record, committees
have a good reputation: the Beaudoin-Dobbie Joint Committee on the proposed
1991 constitutional amendments applauded the Senates investigative role
and proposed its continuation in a reformed institution.
On May 30, 2006 the Leader of the Government in the Senate introduced Bill
S-4, An Act to amend the Constitution Act, 1867 (Senate tenure), a bill
designed to change the term senators could serve to 8 years. At present,
senators can hold their seats until the age of 75. The legislation was
silent as to whether the term limits would be renewable. On December 13,
2006, the government introduced Bill C-43, An Act to provide for consultations
with electors on their preferences for appointments to the Senate. The
bill specified that the consultation would be held concurrently with elections
under the Canada Elections Act and that a preferential voting system would
be used. In his appearance on September 7, 2006 before the Special Committee
on Senate Reform, Prime Minister Stephen Harper indicated that any consultations
with the public would be permissive in nature and it will allow the government
to evaluate how that is affecting the system and what is happening over
a period of time.3
Before either measure is adopted, it may be worthwhile to pause and identify
some of the variables which may or may not be impacted upon by these attempts
to reform the Senate. Under S-4 there is very little change to the constitutional
model. Senators would vacate their seats after 8 years, not a great change
since under the present system senators serve on average 12 years. There
is however a risk that important corporate knowledge will be lost as it
will no longer be possible for senators to serve twenty or thirty years.
Long-serving senators who later in their careers often occupied leadership
positions brought invaluable experience to the legislative process and
this will be missed. On the other hand, Senate membership will be renewed
more often and hence be better attuned to the issues of the day. If the
term limit is not renewable, the independent mindset which senators exhibit
is less likely to change. It is doubtful if their methods of operating
would be much different either. Senators most likely will still make committee
work their first priority and the good reputation of Senate committees
should continue if not improve.
With respect to C-43, it would appear that while there is no formal amendment
to the constitutional model, there is a chance that committee operations
could undergo profound change if the government is committed to recommending
for appointment those who win the elections. It is not clear if the expert
knowledge factor would be affected although it is reasonable to speculate
that senators would revert to being more policy generalists like most members
of the House of Commons as opposed to experts. Nor is it clear if the present
diversity of the Senate would be threatened: it is hoped that the committee
charged with studying C-43 would focus on this question. Preliminary views
are that preferential voting systems are merely variations of the first-past-the-post
systems. If so, it is doubtful if special attention would be given to minority
representation as is presently the case with Senate appointments. Since
the Senate would still not be a confidence chamber, the independent mindset
of senators most likely would be strengthened resulting in important changes
to the party system.
What is perhaps the most significant change concerns the workways of senators.
If they have greater representational obligations, senators may not have
as much time to devote to normal committee business. Since the demands
on their time will increase, the flexibility of committee operations may
be restricted and more formal procedures adopted. Committees will have
to sit while the Senate is sitting. Quorums may be a problem and the need
for substitutions greater. There will be less diffidence shown to the other
place. If through public consultation on appointments the legitimacy of
the Senate increases so will the political utility of committees. They
will become even more of an access point for those disaffected groups who
were unsuccessful in the House of Commons. They may bargain much more vigorously
with the cabinet and the Commons showing more propensity to fight, more
desire to take risks and more willingness to wait. As the experience with
bargaining models show, the "bargainer who is willing to wait longer
will
be more successful
Very often the strategic essence of negotiating is
a
waiting game."4
Under S-4, one should expect little change from the way committees function
since the constitutional model will remain basically the same assuming
that the terms are not renewable. Senate committees should still be defenders
of minority interests and continue to carry out their independent investigative
and policy studies as they will have the time and expert knowledge to do
so. Under the Senate Appointment Consultations Act (C-43), the constitutional
model will undergo informal change which may have significant impact on
the behaviour of committees. Senators may not be able to represent minority
interests as effectively, they may not have the same amount of time to
devote to committee work and their workways will change. They most likely
will exhibit more political independence from their parties. Committees
may shift their focus from policy studies to partisan politics and become
more encouraged to assume bargaining positions which will bring them into
conflict with the House of Commons.
This is not to say that consultation will engulf the Canadian parliament
into hopeless deadlock or bring on divided government. Barring any constitutional
amendment to the powers of the Senate with respect to legislation, there
are practices which presently exist which if used effectively could diffuse
tensions within the parliamentary system. As has been the experience in
the United States Congress, conference committees have been found to be
a useful practice in managing disagreements in bicameral institutions,
particularly those where the legislative power is pretty much co-equal.
Free conferences which are meetings of managers appointed by each house
separately who attempt by discussion to reach an agreement on a bill, already
exist in the recognized procedures of the Senate and House of Commons.
Since most congressional conference committees do reach agreement, it is
not impossible that Canadian conference committees would do the same. There
may be a need to clarify the procedural rules for conference committees
in more detail, but they do offer an effective mechanism to achieve stability
on important legislation.
Notes
1. Parliamentary Debates, 1841, United Province of Canada, pp. 144-5.
2. See C.E.S. Franks, The Parliament of Canada (Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1987), pp. 168-9; Serge Joyal (ed.), Protecting Canadian
Democracy: The Senate You Never Knew (Canadian Centre for Management Development,
2003); Samuel Patterson and Anthony Mughan, Senates: Bicameralism in the
Contemporary World (Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 1999), pp. 120-161.
3. See Proceedings of the Special Senate Committee on Senate Reform September
7, 2006.
4. Howard Rauffa, The Art and Science of Negotiating (Cambridge: Harvard
University Press, 1982), p. 78. See also Gary OBrien, Legislative Influence
of Parliamentary Committees: The Case of the Senate of Canada, 1984-91.
Paper Presented to the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science
Association, 1994.
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