At the time this article was written Richard
French was a Member of the Quebec National Assembly
I would like to address myself to the kind of
scepticism expressed, (I think not without foundation) by Professor Mullan
about the capacity of Parliament to carry out its rather onerous and detailed,
but important responsibilities. It is true that the drive toward adding
creatures to the parliamentary zoo (auditors general, commissions for review of
freedom of information decisions, commissions on human rights, etc.), has been
one of the major thrusts of the last fifteen years of reform of public
administration, at least in this country and I suspect that this is not untrue
of some other jurisdictions.
If we are at the point where the review of
merits of delegated legislation on a systematic basis, as opposed to the merits
of the application of a regulation to a particular case, must be carried out by
somebody other than a parliamentarian, then I think we are making a very
serious comment on the viability of the legislative process and on the
viability of the whole notion of legislation. I am sure that Professor Mullan
knows that. Do we have to concede defeat and create a para-bureaucracy under
our Parliament? Do we claim that because the nominations to this bureaucracy
are carried out by a negotiated process and through the "usual
channels" followed by a sort of pro-forma nomination of personnel in Parliament
itself, it somehow conveys some intrinsic neutrality or intrinsic merit or
virtue on the people thereby named? Do we claim that this form of nomination
vests them with some form of transcendent wisdom that we, by the popular
democratic process, have not been vested with, and that thereby they will be
able to call the bureaucracy to account? If so I think we are largely ignoring
the practical experience of the creatures who are already living in the
parliamentary zoo, such as the Auditor General.
I would be reluctant to multiply such
entities. I would rather say, "Look, we believe in this institution called
Parliament and we would like to extend it in certain ways when we see that it
is patently unfit, for example, to review the accounts of the government".
But to go beyond that and say, "Now, we are not even very good
legislators, you know, and we are rather partisan and we fight with each other
and sometimes the whips are applied and this is bad, because, you know,
politics is something that each of us as individuals should practice on our own
without any collective activity and we really ought to give this matter to some
neutral body", would be a very grave mistake. It is not to create such
bodies that I fought hard for nomination and election as the representative in
my constituency. I must say I feel we must challenge our governments, whatever
their political stripe, on the idea that every single thing one of the
ministers or one of the parliamentary secretaries on behalf of the minister
brings before the house automatically carries with it all the prestige and
confidence of the people residing in their government and that, therefore, if
the measure whatever it may be and however minor it is defeated, in some sense
this is a stain on the legitimacy of the whole government. It is not, and it is
foolish of us, whether we are backbenchers on the government side or opposition
members, to permit whips or the kind of search for security undertaken in
ministerial offices, to allow that pathology to take root. Once that pathology
has taken root, then, indeed, all we exist for is to create more and more
entities to carry out functions which we should be carrying out ourselves.
If parliamentarians do not do this, the
other mechanisms are rather useless. We have to decide at some point to put a
brake on this process and not to allow ourselves to imagine that we need more
administrative solutions to what are fundamentally political problems.