At the time this article was written David
Mitchell was Clerk Assistant of the Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly. This
article was an excerpt from the biography: WA.C. Bennett and the Rise of
British Columbia, published in 1983 by Douglas and McIntyre.
The late W.A.C. Bennett, as Premier of
British Columbia from 1952 to 1972, was a strong-willed and flamboyant leader
whose engaging personality dominated the west coast Legislative Assembly during
those years. His attitude toward the House was largely responsible for shaping
its reputation as a lively and sometimes raucous body. He steadfastly refused
to consider proposals for parliamentary reform and embraced a traditional view
of the role of the Assembly. "Wacky" Bennett was frequently
criticized for clinging to his "old fashioned" interpretation of the
House and its proceedings. This article is based in part upon the reminiscences
of Bennett, his colleagues, and his opponents.
As Premier, W.A.C. Bennett was accused of
many things, but never of being a great parliamentarian. Bennett's attitude
toward the British Columbia Assembly was a constant source of controversy and
led to charges that he was a dictator who ruthlessly disregarded the principles
and niceties of parliamentary government. Bennett was not, however, a dictator,
nor was he a parliamentary despot: he had a deep faith in and veneration for
the essential legislative processes, and expounded a clearly defined, albeit
restricted, role for the Legislative Assembly.
During his years as government leader
Bennett was one of the deans of the Assembly and the only government member to
have served in opposition. His personal history had been marked by a series of
dramatic and critical moments in the Legislative Assembly. For those reasons
alone, he possessed a special appreciation of the role of parliament. Of
course, he held a strongly traditional view of the House and its proceedings,
and stuck firmly to a formula based upon short annual spring legislative
sessions of eight to ten weeks in duration. He developed the perhaps inevitable
attitude that the executive and legislative branches of government are in
conflict. He undoubtedly would have concurred with the century-old sentiment of
Sir John A. Macdonald, who stated that it would be wrong "to waste the
time of the legislature and the money of the people in fruitless discussions on
abstract and theoretical questions of government."
Bennett was a self-described "blunt
businessman," who resisted what he considered to be unnecessary
ventilation, and presided over the Assembly with an iron fist. At the same
time, he had a good sense of the House: he loved to talk, to beguile, to play
to his troops and to the public galleries, to taunt and outrage the beleaguered
opposition. Bennett obviously throve on the special dynamic of the British
Columbia Assembly. Crossfire heckling and fetching repartee became a well
established part of his political repertoire. On other occasions, he could be
so bored and impatient with the session's windy pace that he would permit
himself to be disturbed from a catnap or game of gin rummy with a crony in his
office only for an especially important recorded vote. He was the Master of his
House.
During these years, membership in the
British Columbia Legislative Assembly was not a full time occupation. MLAs'
modest salaries reflected that fact. Most members, out of necessity, held part
time or regular jobs at home in their ridings. A year in the life of a
provincial member was punctuated by sporadic party activity and continuous,
foot-slogging constituency work; and was highlighted by a short and usually
controversial spring session of the Legislature. W.A.C. Bennett remembered:
We didn't waste the people's money. We
didn't have our session too long seven or eight weeks and the members could get
back to their constituencies. They didn't have to be full time MLAs and they
weren't greedy for money. They took an interest in their constituency, where
their voters lived, and in their prosperity and so forth, which was vital.
Then, when they came back to the House, they came back fresh again, with new
ideas. You get them in there with these long sessions, month after month after
month they hardly know what year they're going to end in really! with the
result that they're all tired and they've lost their zip and they've lost their
drive. And not being home amongst their constituents, they're out of touch. And
that's the worst thing that can happen in a democracy, in a parliamentary
system of government. That didn't happen under my system.
Naturally, not everyone agreed with
Bennett's system, one of the most contentious and reviled aspects of which was
legislation by exhaustion." The British Columbia House developed a
reputation as one of Canada's liveliest and most entertaining Assemblies; and
never were sittings more infused with raucous and absurd behaviour than when
the Premier decided to break the back of an opposition filibuster by letting
the members speak until they could speak no more all night long if necessary.
Randolph Harding of the NDP later recalled:
Well, this was a matter, I think, that all
legislatures have been faced with. The government had made up its mind that it
was not going to change its views, and the opposition had made up its mind that
they were going to try and prevent something from going through. And then we
would have these marathon debates, which in the long run didn't mean too much.
You get pretty tired. I think there is a period of concentration which, once
you pass it, why, the effectiveness of the individual goes. It can occur
anywhere, really. But Bennett had a habit of insisting that legislation be
passed by a certain period and if people were still asking questions or raising
objections about some piece of legislation, he would just make them sit right
through. And after you'd been sitting two or three nights, you know, for long
periods of time, you get tired and a lot of things get by that shouldn't. It's
no way, really, of intelligently legislating an important piece of business.
Bennett defended 1egislation by
exhaustion" by placing it within the context of his system:
Well, there's two ways that you can curtail the
length of a session and its debates. One way used in other parliaments is
closure, and I never applied the closure rule and never would have. That cuts
the debate right off ... I wanted to give people every chance to talk. So in
any of the debates there was never any containment, and the hours were always
reasonable, unless the opposition admitted it themselves, and the press knew
it, and everybody else knew without a shadow of a doubt that they were putting
on a very determined filibuster, just killing time, wasting the people's money
and getting nowhere. I wouldn't have a night sitting the first night, or the
second night, or the third night. But if they filibustered day after day with
repetition, then I let them speak. I didn't apply closure, I just let them talk
all night if they wanted to, with no control on time or anything. In all the
time I was Premier we only had five really late, or all night sittings. That's
all we needed. I want to tell you it made for great efficiency in the House,
because the government members knew that the Premier meant business and the
opposition knew that he meant business too and wouldn't stand for filibusters.
If you have filibusters, then you do the same thing that nature does you let
the storm blow itself out.
W.A.C. Bennett always had an adept House
Leader like Attorney General Robert Bonner to rescue him from the treacherous
shoals of parliamentary procedure. But the Premier was generally at home and in
command in the legislative chamber. Bonner later reflected: "He had a
great sense of the House. He could be dramatic as required. And he could alter
the mood of the House simply by going into it, which is quite a personal
achievement." As a parliamentarian, Bennett could usually be counted upon
for an effective performance. He was, however, no great orator. He rarely
completed a sentence; his vocabulary was amazingly restricted; he massacred
rules of grammar. His agile mind raced ahead of his ability to speak: and his
words often sputtered out in a confusing, excited entanglement of enthusiastic
verbiage. In fact, it has been suggested that Bennett suffered from a slight
speech impediment. But this is not to say that he was a poor public speaker: on
the contrary, the art of oratory is the art of influencing people; and in that
sense, Bennett was a compelling artist. The manner of his presentation was
always fascinating. The mumble-jumble of the delivery, along with his indelible
grin and chopping hand gestures, were set characteristics of his ritualistic
speeches. Opposition leader, Robert Strachan, later recalled:
Bennett was a pretty formidable character in
the House, let me tell you. It was very frightening at times, especially when
he gave what we called his 'flying fish act.' He gave it about four times a
session, he had it letter perfect and word perfect and gesture perfect. And the
backbenchers knew all the cues and they would applaud and cheer and hurrah ...
He had all these phrases that rolled off, and he was great. . . he'd go on for
about an hour and the place would be in an uproar. He would talk about the
P.G.E. Railway as 'the brightest jewel in our crown' and 'this little
government...' and he'd go right through their history about all that they'd
done and he'd go on about this awful opposition that was 'throwing sand in the
gears.' He'd have all the Socreds pounding their desks and their eyes would be
sparkling and they'd be grinning from ear to ear. It was quite a show. He
hadn't talked about the particular piece of legislation we were on, but that
was all right ... It wasn't great debate, but it was a good circus.
Relatively speaking, these were genteel days
when the power of politics in British Columbia could be exercised in an
atmosphere free from the poisonous clouds of excessive partisanship and
polarization. During legislative sessions, for instance, Bennett and Strachan,
or, as they addressed one another, "Mr. Premier" and "Mr. Leader
of the Opposition," would have a weekly cup of tea together. But like all
successful politicians, Bennett could play Jekyll and Hyde. Back in the
chamber, he subscribed wholly to the dictum of Dr. Samuel Johnson: 1reating
your adversary with respect is giving him an advantage to which he is not
entitled." Social Credit cabinet minister, Dan Campbell, recalled his
freshman impression of the Premier in the Assembly:
1 thought he was quite dynamic. I can
remember one time though, on the floor of the House, when I thought he was too
hard on Strachan. And I went up to him and told him that I thought he could
have been a little more generous with what he had to say about Strachan. And he
just cut me off and said, 'Well young man if you think this is a Sunday school
picnic, you'd better go back to Sunday school. Don't stay around here!'
In spite of Bennett's traditional and
limited view of the role of the Legislative Assembly, or possibly because of
it, the British Columbia Assembly was more vital during the years he served as
Premier than it has been since. Legislative sessions were short, snappy events.
The media was offered a regular, if seasonal, least of some fine and bizarre
performances. Bennett's administrations were always successful in completing
their legislative agendas; but the opposition parties also did a commendable
job in their role of watchdog on the executive. Both sides of the House
understood the rules and limits of the game, and stretched them accordingly.
One of the obvious reasons for the vitality of west coast parliamentary
democracy was the character of the members who populated the British Columbia
legislature.
This was an era when politicians were
personalities, larger than life. There was, for instance, in the government
front benches, a striking contrast between Attorney General, Robert Bonner and
Highways Minister Phil Gaglardi. Bonner was articulate, urbane, and always well
prepared, with a demonstrated air of superiority and a ready laugh although few
laughed with him. Gaglardi was the proven master of spurious bombast. He
frequently lifted the dome off the building with his booming voice and
stentorian inanities. Up until 1960, Tom Uphill sat in the opposition benches
as an independent Labour member. Uphill, a legendary folk figure in west coast
politics, was responsible for daily practical jokes: he once distributed copies
of a Parisian girly magazine to his dozing fellow members. If a member was
discovered bent over in stitches or inexplicably rolling in the aisles of the
legislative chamber, it was usually because he had just deciphered a
handwritten message from old Tom. There was Robert Strachan, with his beautiful
Scottish brogue and his quick sense of outrage. In most political cultures,
Strachan would eventually have become Premier; but W. A. C. Bennett assured him
the unenviable record of almost a decade and a half as Leader of the
Opposition. There were old-time Socreds like William Chant, who could be relied
upon each session for a major address on Social Credit monetary theory. The
opposition ranks would invariably shout in unison: "A plus B! A plus
B!" (A reference to the A plus B theorem, an integral part of Social
Credit monetary theory as expounded by Major C.H. Douglas in Britain during the
1920s.)
There were others like Bennett's old crony,
Waldo Skillings, who finally made it to the House in 1960, and served as an
amiable but quick-tempered government Whip. Skillings, who had a reputation for
fisticuffs, repeatedly challenged opposition members to "step
outside." On one occasion, when the opposition was engaged in a filibuster
on the Premier's estimates, Skillings and Bennett decided to have a cup of tea
up in the legislative dining room. An NDP member, upon discovering them, began
to berate the Premier for shirking his duties and relaxing when he should have
been in the House. Skillings could not tolerate such intemperance; he quickly
rose, slugged the offending member, and shoved him down a flight of stairs.
Surprisingly unharmed, the opposition member climbed back up the stairs, kicked
Skillings with great force in the shins, then rapidly retreated from the dining
room. Waldo Skillings, limping, pursued; but, perhaps fortunately, could not
catch up with him.
There was also the uncelebrated Agnes
Kripps, Social Credit member for Vancouver South, who aroused the House one day
by proposing to eliminate the offensive word, "sex," from the Pacific
coast vocabulary, and offered for substitution, "BOLT' – for "Biology
of Living for Today." Her incredulous fellow members could hardly believe
their ears. "I'm boil upright just listening to you," cried one NDP
backbencher. Poor Mrs. Kripps floundered on, until one of her fellow government
members shouted: "it's okay for the bolts but what about the nuts?"
Flustered and off pace, Kripps tried vainly to silence the wildly bemused House
by pleading to the Chair: "Mr. Speaker, Mr. Speaker, won't you please bang
that thing of yours on the table?'
The various Speakers who served the
Legislative Assembly of British Columbia while W. A. C. Bennett was Premier
were accorded the independence and respect necessary to fulfil the customary
duties of their office. One area, however, about which the Premier was adamant
was legislative reform. Procedures in the House had not been altered since
1930; changes that were being adopted or experimented with in other
legislatures were simply not considered. The Premier liked things the way they
were, and made his time honoured point of view well known. Bennett was opposed
to the institution of a daily oral question period, and could not see the
benefit of a regular or complete Hansard service. Legislative committees met
infrequently during legislative sessions, matters of substance only rarely
being referred to them. The Premier could not see or did not want to see why
the House should have the services of an independent auditor general when his
own controller general was already inspecting the government's books. He could
not understand the rationale for improving members' services and facilities or
increasing their pay they were representatives of the people, and therefore
should live like ordinary people. The opposition hammered continuously on the
need for House reform, but the government's ears were deaf to proposals to
change a timeworn system which worked to its satisfaction.
Years later, Bennett defended his stand on
this issue: "The questions that are asked in a question period are not the
questions of the day; they are partisan, political questions asked for
political advantage. And the answers are withheld or, when they are given, are
political answers just trying to score points. They don't get down to brass
tacks. Our system was way better than that. We would have a session of seven or
eight weeks. The first part of the session is the Speech from the Throne and in
the debate which follows every member can get up and speak as long as he likes
and say what he likes. Then following that we have the budget and the budget
debate again, freedom to say anything they like on the Budget or anything else.
This was a great avenue for new ideas into the legislative forum. Then
following that you got into the meat of the session which is the estimates
where every minister has to defend his own salary and department's budget and
the Premier had to defend the whole government. When I was there the opposition
would quiz me back and forth. They could get up and speak twenty times, not
just ask one question but ask a hundred questions, pointed questions, which are
the best ... So it wasn't just a few little questions politically asked and
politically answered at the opening of each day, killing a quarter of the
session when we could be getting work done. Instead, most of the session was
devoted to real questions and answers between ministers and the legislature. I
wanted a system in British Columbia where we'd have good attendance every day,
every member in his seat, every member afraid that he would miss something if
he was not in his seat. And I think that made for a better parliamentary
system. And I think independent minds would say that the legislature was more
dynamic in those years than it has been since ... We had a very efficient legislature,
a very efficient House ... And I was opposed to a Hansard because you must take
the wheat from the chaff. We had the Votes and Proceedings which are the
records of the House and are very important. So a record of what happened in
the House was made every day by the staff set up for that purpose. There were
no secrets in the House; it was all done openly; everything was recorded ...
And the reason I was opposed to Hansard is because parliament must be a
debating society and people must be on the floor of that House to hear the
debate bang, bang across the floor; that's parliament ... The best parliament
is the debating parliament, where everybody's in their chairs wondering what
the next guy's going to say, making notes. The worst parliament you can have is
one where a chap says, 'I don't have to be there today, I can be playing cards
somewhere, be anywhere, because I'm going to read it all in Hansard. I won't
miss anything.' So the members don't go into the House at all; they just keep a
few in there for a quorum, they pay no attention ... So you've killed your
thrust of debate; you've destroyed parliament. Hansard is destroying the
legislature."
It would be difficult to argue that W. A. C.
Bennett did not have a well developed sense of how the legislature should
function. Naturally, he was criticized for not succumbing to various proposals
for legislative reform. Curiously, his view of the legislature was a static
one; yet the House he was master of was a dynamic place. One can convincingly
argue that the changes which have occurred since Bennett's time have helped
render the British Columbia Legislative Assembly a less relevant forum for
successive governments and oppositions.