At the time this article was
written Marc Bosc was a Procedural Clerk in the Bourinot Project Office of the
House of Commons
A glance through a dusty volume of
l9th century Debates from the Canadian House portrays a Chamber in which
dullness, a controlled Victorian atmosphere, high collars and high erudition
seemed to be the order of the day. How different from our present high-tech,
televised debates, where age-old traditions of respectful parliamentary order
and decorum seem all but forgotten. But as with so much that solicits a
nostalgic sigh, quite another reality lies just below the placid Victorian
surface -- a reality that would make even the most outré behaviour today seem
tame by comparison. Fortunately, as a complement to Debates from that time we
do have detailed written accounts of shenanigans in these early years. From
them emerges quite a different picture of parliamentary life in the first
decades after Confederation.
In that period, the Speaker's task
to preserve order and decorum appears to have been very difficult. The root of
the disorder, some have suggested, could be found just below the Chamber, in
the basement of the Parliament Buildings, where a much-frequented bar
plied" intoxicating liquors" to members seeking
"refreshment" during the lengthy evening debates. As a result of overindulgence
on the part of some members the Chair was regularly confronted with rude and
disorderly conduct which it was unable to stem. One early account of a typical
evening in the House (recorded, incidentally, for a newspaper by an MP who
later became Speaker: one Timothy Anglin) underscores the gravity of the
decorum problem in those days:
"Some half a dozen or a dozen
Members gather around the Clerk's table, and the clauses of the bill are passed
one by one in rapid succession; while the rest of the Members, who have not
escaped to the saloon, amuse themselves in various ways, somewhat after the
manner of irrepressible school boys in the absence of the teacher. Some few,
more staid and sober than the rest, settle down in their seats in the hope that
they may b allowed to pen a letter or perchance read an article in their local
paper. Unfortunate man! Vain hope! A huge paper ball, thrown from some skilful
hand in the rear, scatters pen, ink and paper in rude confusion over the desk,
while a seat cushion or a formidable blue book from another quarter comes
thundering down upon the worthy Member's head, sending his ideas in a hurly
burly race after his writing material and arousing within him the spirit of
retaliation. And thus the sport commences. Paper balls, blue books, bills,
private and public, cushions, hats and caps of all styles, are brought into
requisition, and are sent whirling through the room in every direction."
(1)
Faced with this kind of display, it
is no wonder that Speaker Cockburn (the Commons' first Speaker once described
as a "little man, low voiced, retiring and apparently timid") (2)
could not manage to stop the horseplay. Of course, indecorous behaviour was not
always quite so brazen. Less visible, but equally objectionable carryings-on
were often prompted by that parliamentary plague, the bore. One member, Joseph
Cauchon, dealt harshly with tedious speakers by hiding behind the back row of
seats in the House armed with a large jewsharp, from which he produced sounds
so distracting that even the most determined member would soon give up and sit
down.(3) Another method accessible to all members was
"desk-scraping". The desks in the old House were, as now, fixed to
the floor. A Member leaning back in his cushioned chair could, "by
pressing the side of his boot-sole firmly against the side of the desk and
moving his toe ever so little... produce a creaking noise that shook the nerves
of even an experienced speaker and dislocated every joint in his
ideas."(4)
If this kind of anonymous
interruption made the Speaker's task difficult his annoyance must have been
exacerbated by members’ special fondness for imitating cats, a practice which
evinced from one member the plea that the Speaker put a stop to the
caterwauling of what another member called an "emaciated tom cat".5
But meowing was the least of it; on numerous occasions more forceful
methods were used. In one case in 1882 several Members brought firecrackers
into the House and discharged them indiscriminately throughout the evening.6
In another instance members tossed a cricket ball from one side of the
House to the other, much to the delight of gallery spectators.(5)
Perhaps the most incredible breakdown in
behavioural standards occurred in the spring of 1878 after Mr. Letellier de St.
Just, Lieutenant Governor of the Province of Quebec, had dismissed the
Conservative provincial government there. While new elections were underway, a
debate began in the federal House on the Lieutenant Governor's highly unusual
action. The Conservatives under Macdonald were in Opposition at the time, and
strongly disagreed with de St. Just's decision. They seized the opportunity to
debate the issue at length in an effort to help their Quebec colleagues win
re-election. As a contemporary chronicler put it:
"The scene had no parallel
before or since the government was established at Ottawa. While points of order
were being argued, Members hammered at desks, blew on tin trumpets, imitated
the crowing of cocks, sent up toy-balloons, and occasionally hurled blue-books
across the House. Often the babel of sounds was such that neither the Speaker
of the House nor the Member who had the floor could be heard. Once in a while
amid the din some Member with a good voice would start up the
"Marseillaise," "God save the Queen," " à la claire fontaine,"
"The Raftsman's chorus," or some plantation melody, and then the
whole House would join in the song, with an effect that was quite moving.
And later, when a Mr. Haggart rose
to speak:
"In front of him in a solid
phalanx the ministerial battalion was roaring, howling, hooting, singing,
whistling, stamping, shouting and caterwauling. That frisky kitten Dymond was
suspiciously toying with a waste-basket; while the genteel Cheval, who looked
as if he had strayed into the House by mistake, was expanding a toy bag-pipe,
for the purpose of dropping it into the inverted crown of Dr. Brossé's slouch
hat. At last Dymond let fly his waste-basket among a group of ministerial
friends. The toy bag-pipe appeared in Dr. Brossé's hat, and squealed to such a
degree that he clutched it and threw it to another Member, who stopped singing
in order to blow it up again. But not understanding how to manipulate it, the
noisy object set up such a wail as fairly brought down the House. While this
had been going on Lady Dufferin came in, and when she left, the House once more
gave "God save the Queen," followed up with a cheer and such waving
of handkerchiefs as would have led a stranger to believe that Queen Victoria
herself was quitting the Chamber.(7)
And on it went, the Speaker being
powerless -- his voice having given out -- to stop it. After some twenty-seven
hours, an exhausted House finally adjourned.
There are many more incidents and
stories to tell, but by now those of us under the impression that the early
years of the House of Commons were marked only by measured argument and
brilliant eloquence have been shocked by the quite different reality captured
by chroniclers of the day. Observers (and enforcers) of parliamentary order and
decorum can take comfort in the knowledge that those days are mercifully past,
and that despite the inevitable heated exchanges and heckling normal in any
deliberative assembly, the modern House of Commons is a far cry from the
hard-drinking, boisterous and at times uncontrollable legislature of the late
1800s.