At the time
this article was written R.R. Walsh was
Law Clerk and Parliamentary Counsel of the House of Commons. The author
acknowledges the extensive statistical research done by John Mundie, without
which this article would not be possible.
Many Private
Members’ Bills are drafted by House of Commons legislative counsel but not all
are later introduced in the House of Commons and few are adopted. Nevertheless,
Private Member’s Bills constitute a helpful educational tool even when they do
not succeed in changing the law or making new law. This article looks at
Private Member’s Bills introduced over the last two Parliaments and offers
insights about the use of this particular parliamentary tool.
Members of Parliament often complain about the limited
opportunities for them in respect of legislative initiatives. Sometimes
their concerns are expressed in terms of the resources provided to private
Members for this purpose. Other times, the complaints relate to House
procedure in respect of Private Members’ Business.
A1974 study noted a significant
increase in the number of Private Member’s Bills (PMB’s) introduced in the
House but no significant increase in the number enacted as law.
For the most part, the empirical data
confirms the generally accepted view of the place of Private Member’s Bills in
the policy process. Policy decision-making is primarily the preserve of
the Government which closely guides the schedule of the House of Commons to
ensure the passage of its programmes….
Therefore, there are two basic
perspectives from which PMB’s can be assessed as to their saliency within the
political system. Their role as a means of introducing policy is of
little significance; however, their role of providing a means by which to
express opinion…is of some significance which should not be readily overlooked.1
An earlier British study of PMB’s summarized
the difficulties with PMB’s, apart from “mechanical” problems relating to House
procedure, as a function of “the modern conception of governmental
responsibility:”
There is a widely-held supposition…that
the Government of the day, because it will be responsible for administering any
new Act of Parliament, ought not to be expected to have to take responsibility
for administering any new Act that it had not itself decided to introduce.
The obverse side of this argument is that it is wrong for individual
Members of Parliament, as individuals, to introduce measures for the
administration of which they will themselves have no responsibility.2
In a later British study on PMB’s, the
author argues that the independence of the legislative branch from the executive
branch, which all parliamentary systems are based on, can be usefully measured
through PMB’s because sponsoring a PMB is the only area where a private Member
plays a key role in respect of legislation:
As such it represents almost a base
line against which to judge the influence of the individual MP….If, in this
area, the Government still plays the key role, despite the constitutional
position, then we have further important evidence of the limited nature of the
legislature position. Very little would then be left to the ordinary MP.3
Despite their limited impact on
lawmaking a statistical survey of PMB’s illustrates a number of interesting
features of this part of the parliamentary agenda.
The Numbers
Before looking at the statistics a few preliminary
points must be kept in mind.
- Legislative counsel are required to give
priority service to Members who are making their first PMB’s request of
the session. Otherwise, these Bills are drafted on a first-come,
first-served basis.
- While there were 295 Members of
Parliament in the 35th Parliament (1994-97), and 301 members
thereafter, only individuals who were not ministers or Chair occupants
constitute the client group for drafting PMB’s. This group consisted of
261 members in the 35th Parliament and 265 in the 26th Parliament.
- We must distinguish between new and
recycled PMB’s. A new bill is one that was not drafted or introduced
in the House in an earlier session. A recycled bill was drafted and
prepared for introduction, and in some cases was introduced, in an earlier
session. A bill that is to be recycled must nonetheless be reviewed
by legislative counsel and possibly redrafted in part where the law has
changed. As a rule, it takes less time to prepare a recycled bill
than it does to prepare a new bill.
As shown in the accompanying table in
the first session of the 35th Parliament (1994-96), House
legislative counsel received 438 requests for a PMB, of which 366 were
for new bills and 72 for recycled bills. Of the 438 requests, 297 were
completed and made ready for introduction in the House, of which 166 were
introduced. Of these bills, half were drawn for debate, 14% were
designated as votable, 8% were approved by the House on a vote at second
reading, less than 2% were adopted by the House at third reading and received
royal assent and became law. The table shows the corresponding figures
for the later sessions.
Only 16% of the PMB’s introduced in the
first session of the 35th Parliament were recycled bills.
The 35th Parliament saw a change of government and a
significant change in the membership of the House. For this reason, the
number of Private Members in the 35th Parliament who had introduced
a PMB in the previous 34th Parliament was lower than it otherwise
would be. In later sessions the number of new PMB’s decreases
while the number of recycled PMB’s increases. In 36/2, as much as
83% of the PMB’s introduced in the House were recycled bills.
There had not been a change of government or a significant change in the
membership of the House between these sessions.
In 36/2 as many as 79 PMB’s were
introduced in the House for a third time, another 27 for a fourth time and 8
for a fifth time. Session 36/2 was a session during which there was
widespread expectation of dissolution for a general election. This proved
to be the case after the session had lasted only one year. It might be
supposed that some Private Members, anticipating a general election soon,
wanted to be visibly responsible, as a matter of record, for a legislative initiative
important to his or her riding and for this purpose revived legislative
initiatives from previous sessions.
The average page length of PMB’s was
fairly consistent across the four sessions, though it is important to note that
the upper end of the range is significantly higher. The average length of
the longest 25% of PMB’s is on average twice the overall average and three
times the average for the shorter 75%. While PMB’s are invariably much
shorter and less complex than Government Bills, length is not necessarily
indicative of legal complexity nor can it be said that bills of similar length
take the same time to prepare.
Most PMB’s amend existing Acts of
Parliament. In 35/1, 70% of PMB requests were to amend an existing
federal statute. In 35/2, it was 76% and then again 70% in each of the
two sessions of the 36th Parliament. In each of the four
sessions, the Criminal Code was the leading target: 19%, 18%, 15% and
16% of PMB requests in each session, respectively. In second place is the
Income Tax Act at 6%, 4%, 6% and 7% and in third place, the Employment
Insurance Act at 3%, 2%, 3% and 3%.
What is not indicated in the
accompanying table is the use of PMB’s by Members in each of the recognized
political parties in the House. Those who might think of PMB’s as
opposition bills should know that 45% of the PMB’s introduced in the House in
the 35th Parliament came from the government side of the House.
This figure went down to 35% in the 36th Parliament. The
Official Opposition Members (Reform Party and then Canadian Alliance Party), at
20%-22% of the eligible client group in both Parliaments, introduced 35%-39% of
the PMB’s. Bloc Quebecois Members, at 20% of the client group in the 35th
Parliament and 17 % in the 36th Parliament, sponsored 12% of the
PMB’s introduced in the House in each Parliament. NDP Members, at 3.5 %
of the client group in the 35th Parliament, sponsored 8% of the
bills introduced in that Parliament. At 7% in the 36th Parliament,
NDP Members were responsible for 10% of the PMB’s introduced in the House.
The Progressive Conservative Members, being only 2 in number in the 35th
Parliament, did not get on the scoreboard in that Parliament. In the 36th
Parliament with 15 to 20 Members or 5% - 7% of the client group they
sponsored 3% of the PMB’s.
The other profile that emerges from the
statistics, though not in those included in the accompanying table, is the
number of Private Members who requested more than one PMB. In 35/1,
60 of the 139 Private Members requesting a PMB made 3 or more
requests and were responsible for 75% of the PMB’s requested in that session.
This group constitutes 23% of the client group of 261 Private Members in
35/1. In subsequent sessions, these figures were 52 Members (20%) being
responsible for 76% of the requests in 35/2, 78 Members (29%) being responsible
for 80% of the requests in 36/1 and 58 Members (22%) being responsible for 78%
of the requests in 36/2. In other words, it is a minority of Private
Members that generates a majority of the requests for PMB’s.
Numbers also paint a picture of how the
traffic in PMB requests varies at different times of the year. PMB
requests are higher in the month or two following the opening of a new Parliament
or session. Generally, September/October and February/March are the busy
periods for new PMB’s. Requests for recycled PMB’s are high
at the start of a session and decrease considerably within a month or so.
A more difficult phenomenon to measure in numbers is
turnaround time, that is, the time between legislative counsel receiving a
request from the sponsoring Member and delivering back to the Member a
bilingual bill ready for introduction in the House. Without spending an
inordinate amount of time, it is not possible to determine a “net” turnaround
time, that is, turnaround measured in working days only. Accordingly, the
turnaround times reported in the table are calendar days, that is, include
weekends, statutory holidays and annual leave.
The Office of the Law Clerk tries to
monitor the amount of time taken at each of the three stages in the preparation
of a PMB, namely, pre-drafting, drafting and post-drafting. The
pre-drafting stage is generally the time a PMB request waits for attention on
legislative counsel’s desk. If not a priority first request, each request
must wait its turn (and legislative counsel must at all times give priority to
drafting Private Member’s amendments to Government Bills for use at committee
stage or report stage). There was an average pre-drafting wait of 10
calendar days in 35/1, 13 days in 35/2, 8 days in 36/1 and 16 days in 36/2.
The increased time waiting in 36/2 might be explained by the increased
demand for amendments at report stage during this session.
In session 35/1, the drafting stage on
average took 50 calendar days, 40 days in 35/2, 78 days in 36/1 and 42 days in
36/2. Why the increase to 78 days in 36/1? This was due to an
increased demand for amendments at both committee stage and especially report stage
during this period coupled with the fact that the legislative counsel
complement was still at the 1994 level of two lawyers and had not yet increased
to its present level of four.
The post-drafting stage includes
translation of the final draft PMB into the second language, editing review by
legislative editors and formatting into the dual-column format required for
introduction in the House. The average time for this stage was 5 days in
35/1, 11 days in 35/2, 23 days in 36/1 and 12 days in 36/2. The increased
average post-drafting turnaround time in 36/1 corresponds with the increased
drafting turnaround time in this period, perhaps for the same reason.
Turnaround time differs considerably as
between new and recycled PMB’s. The latter must wait their
turn along with the new PMB’s but once at the drafting stage they
usually take less time. The average turnaround time for a recycled
PMB over the period 1994-2000 was 53 calendar days and for new PMB’s was
118 days. The average turnaround time by political party indicates an
average of 60 days for both Liberal Members and Reform/Canadian Alliance
Members, 47 days for Bloc Quebecois Members, 64 days for N.D.P. Members and 55
days for P.C. Members.
Over the seven-year period 1994-2000,
the average turnaround time on PMB requests that went to completion, that is,
were made ready for introduction in the House at first reading, was 59 days.
This breaks down to an average of 10 days at the pre-drafting stage
(waiting in line), 33 days in drafting (which includes consultations with the
sponsoring Member on drafts and waiting for comments or further instructions)
and 16 days in post-drafting (translation, editing and formatting).
One might ask how the past four
sessions since 1994 compare with earlier sessions. From 1968-1969 to
1999-2000, there were 22 parliamentary sessions over a period of 32 years.
Using sitting days as a basis for a comparison of sessions in respect of
PMB’s, session 28/1 (1968-69) had 0.8 PMB’s per sitting day, session 30/1
(1974-76) had 0.7 PMB’s per sitting day, session 32/1 (1980-83) had 0.8 PMB’s
per sitting day, session 34/3 (1991-93) had 1 PMB per sitting day and session
36/2 (1999-00) had 2.3 PMB’s per sitting day.
It would appear that the rate of PMB’s per
sitting day went from 0.8 in the late 1960s to 2.3 by the end of the 1990s, a
tripling over the 32-year period. However, the increase is not in a
straight-line progression. The rate of PMB’s per sitting day, over the 22
sessions and 32 years, is usually between 0.5 and 1.5. It is higher where
the session is comparatively short as most PMB’s are introduced in the earlier
part of a session. Comparisons made between different sessions must use
sessions of comparable length.
In the current session, 37/1, at the
time of writing, the House has been sitting for 152 days and 235 PMB’s have
been introduced for a ratio of 1.6 PMB’s per sitting day, the 7th
highest of 23 sessions since 1968. Comparable sessions are session 30/3
(1977-78), 25 years ago, which had 151 sittings days and 1.8 PMB’s per sitting
day and session 2/28 (1969-70), over 30 years ago, which had 155 sitting days
and 1.3 PMB’s, per sitting day.
Session
|
35/1
|
35/2
|
36/1
|
36/2
|
Dates
|
(Jan. 1994
to Feb. 1996)
|
(Feb. 1966 to
Apr. 1997)
|
(Sept. 1997
to Sept. 1999)
|
(Oct. 1999
to Oct. 2000)
|
Sitting
Days
|
283
|
165
|
246
|
134
|
Private
Members eligible1
|
261
|
261
|
265
|
265
|
Private
Members requesting a PMB
|
139 (53%)
|
131 (50%)
|
164 (62%)
|
143 (54%)
|
Requests
by Private Members
|
438
|
390
|
587
|
486
|
- New PMB’s
|
366 (84%)
|
229 (59%)
|
381(65%)
|
158 (33%)
|
- Recycled2
|
72 (16%)
|
161 (41%)
|
206 (35%)
|
328 (67%)
|
- Completed
|
297 (68%)
|
332 (85%)
|
436 (74%)
|
407 (84%)
|
-
Terminated3
|
141 (32%)
|
58 (15%)
|
151 (26%)
|
79 (16%)
|
Introduced
in the House
|
166 (38%)
|
244 (62%)
|
320 (55%)
|
312 (64%)
|
- Drawn for
debate
|
83 (50%)
|
58 (23.5%)
|
73 (23%)
|
40 (12.5%)
|
-
Designated votable
|
23 (14%)
|
20 (8.2%)
|
17 (4.4%)
|
12 (3.5%)
|
- Adopted
at 2nd reading
|
15 (8%)
|
25 (10%)
|
14 (4.4%)
|
11 (3.5%)
|
- Adopted
at 3rd
reading
|
3 (1.8%)
|
8 (3.3%)
|
8 (2.5%)
|
5 (1.6%)
|
- Received
Royal Assent
|
3 (1.8%)
|
6 (2.5 %)
|
6 (1.9%)
|
3 (1.0%)
|
PMBs per
sitting day
|
0.6 (166/283)
|
1.5 (243/165)
|
1.3 (320/246)
|
2.3 (312/134)
|
House
time (hours)3
|
1,441
|
845
|
1,327
|
637
|
-
Government Orders
|
946 (66%)
|
555 (66%)
|
871 (66%)
|
418 (6%)
|
- Private
Members’ Business4
|
215 (15%)
|
126 (15%)
|
198 (15%)
|
95 (15%)
|
- Private
Member’s Bills
|
107 (7.4%)
|
69 (8.2%)
|
95 (7%)
|
45 (7%)
|
Average
PMB length
(pages)
|
5.1
(range = 2 to 42)
|
5.2
(range = 2 to 32)
|
5.2
(range = 2 to 64)
|
5.3
(range = 2 to 66)
|
Turnaround
time (days)5
|
58
|
77
|
62
|
49
|
Notes:
1. Includes all Members
except Ministers, the Speaker and other Chair occupants.
2. Terminated PMB’s are ones that were withdrawn, put on hold or cancelled by
the sponsoring Member before completion.
3. The only firm numbers here are those for Private Members’ Business and those
for Private Member’s Bills as these hours are recorded by the Private Members’
Business Office. The weekly schedule of the House totals 33.5 sitting hours, of
which 5 hours (15%) are scheduled for Private Members’ Business, 5 hours (15%)
for Question Period/S.O. 31 and approximately 1.5 hours (4.5%) for Routine
Proceedings, the balance (66%) is scheduled for Government Orders, including
the Business of Supply. On this basis, the hours given in the Table for
Government Orders (including Business of Supply) are estimated with reference
to the hours recorded for Private Members’ Business as 15% of the scheduled
sitting week. The hours estimated for Question Period/S.O. 31 and for Routine
Proceedings are included in the estimated total House time for each session but
not included in the breakdown as not relevant.
4. Based only on PMB’s that were completed and sent to the sponsoring MP ready
for introduction in the House.
5. Includes hours given to both Private Members’ Motions and PMB’s.
In the end, the numbers suggest that
75% of “eligible” Private Members in the Canadian House have little or no
interest in using a Private Member’s Bill as an arrow in his or her
parliamentary quiver. Is this because the process holds very little
prospect of a worthwhile result, i.e., becoming law? Might this change if
more time were made available for Private Member’s Bills? Despite only
25% of Private Members using PMB’s, there are more PMB’s introduced in the
House than could ever be debated even if the time were increased significantly.
Should the House reduce the time allowed for debate on each PMB to, say,
one hour to enable more of them to be debated? If all PMB’s were subject
to a vote, would this cause more Private Members to introduce a PMB?
For the 35th and 36th
Parliaments, a total of 1,901 PMB’s were requested, of which 1,472 (77%) were
completed for introduction in the House. Of the latter 1,042 (71%) were
introduced in the House, of which (24%) were drawn for debate, (7%) were
designated as votable, (2.3%) were adopted by the House and (1.7%) later became
law on Royal Assent.
And what are the few “successful” PMB’s
about? In session 35/1 (1994-96), the House (and Senate) approved three
PMB’s. Bill C-216 amended the Unemployment Insurance Act (as it
then was) to enable persons serving on jury duty to remain qualified for
unemployment insurance benefits.4 Bill C-207 enabled the
Auditor General to report to the House more frequently than on an annual basis.
Bill C-212 gave legislative sanction to recognizing ice hockey and
lacrosse as Canada’s national sports.
In session 35/2, the House approved 8
PMB’s, of which one went through all stages on the same day by unanimous
consent of the House and 6 later received Royal Assent. Bill C-202
declared the last week of April as “National Organ Donor Week”. Bill
C-347 changed the names of 22 electoral districts. Bill C-275 gave
corporate status and legal powers to the Canadian Association of Former
Parliamentarians. Bill C-300 established the Canadian Peacekeeping
Service Medal. Bill C-243 amended the Canada Elections Act in
respect to the reimbursement of political parties for election expenses.
Bill C-270 amended the Financial Administration Act to limit the
use of special warrants of the Governor General for authorizing payments out of
the Consolidated Revenue Fund.
In session 36/1, the House adopted 8
PMB’s, of which 6 by unanimous consent were approved at all stages on the same
day. Six PMBs received royal assent and became law. Of these, three
changed the name of the sponsoring Member’s electoral district. A fourth
changed the names of 19 electoral districts. Bill C-411 amended the Canada
Elections Act to enable the Chief Electoral Officer to accept late filings
and payments by candidates. Bill C-208 amended the Access to
Information Act to provide sanctions against persons who destroy or falsify
government records in an attempt to deny access.
In session 36/2, the House adopted 5
PMB’s of which 2 were adopted at all stages on the same day. Three PMB’s
later received royal assent and became law. Bill C-445 changed the name
of an electoral district while Bill C-473 changed the names of 12 electoral
districts. Bill C-202 amended the Criminal Code to create the
offence of trying to evade the police while driving a motor vehicle.
In summary, of the 18 PMB’s from
1994-2000 that became law, 7 changed the names of electoral districts, 2 were
“nominal” or declaratory and did not make a substantive change in the law and 9
were substantive and made a change to the statutory laws of Canada.
Private Members may not think this a great score.
The problem is not a shortage of bills,
including bills making a substantive change to the laws of Canada. The
problem, from the sponsoring Private Member’s point of view, might be the lack
of House time sufficient to consider both the Government’s legislative agenda
and the various and many legislative initiatives of Private Members.
Notes
1. Stewart
Hyson, “The Role of the Backbencher – An analysis of Private Member’s Bills in
the Canadian House of Commons”, Parliamentary Affairs, 1974.
2. P.A. Bromhead, Private Member’s Bills in the British Parliament,
London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1956), p. 3.
3. Marsh, David and Read, Melvyn, Private Member’s’Bills (New York:
Cambridge University Press, 1988) at p. 2.
4. This PMB required a royal recommendation as it authorized the spending
of public funds and is the only PMB to obtain a royal recommendation since the
rules were changed in 1994 to enable a PMB that required a royal recommendation
to be introduced and proceed through the legislative process provided a royal
recommendations is obtained before the bill is put to a vote at third reading.