At the time this article was
written Douglass Everett and Duff Roblin were members of the Senate of Canada
All laws must be passed by both the
House of Commons, which is elected and the appointed Senate. In November 1986
the Conservative Government introduced Bill C-22 to extend the patent
protection for certain pharmaceutical products. After extensive debate in the
House and in Committee the bill was passed in May 1987 and sent to the Senate
where the Liberals enjoy a large majority. Following consideration by a Senate
Committee, the Bill was returned to the House with amendments. The government
agreed to some but not all changes and returned C-22 to the Senate. Another
Senate committee looked at the bill and once again returned it to the House
with amendments and a request for a joint conference. The House declined and
returned the bill once again to the Senate. On November 19, 1987, the Senate
again considered C-22. By this time the argument was not longer over drug
patent protection but over the proper role of the Upper House in the Canadian
system. The following speeches by Senators Douglas Everett and Duff Roblin were
delivered shortly before the division on third reading. The final vote was
reading was: 27 in favour, 3 opposed and 32 abstentions. While C-22 passed the
issues raised in these two speeches will be debated for months and years to
come.
My reservations on this legislation
are not based so much on the content of the bill or the amendments that have
been proposed but rather on the way it has been handled by the government in
the other place. I agree with Senator Murray that this has now become a
constitutional matter. If you examine how this was handled, you have to start
from the fact that the minister at the outset stated that he would not pay
attention to anything that the Senate said. He said that not just once, he said
it several times and in a very pejorative manner.
The Senate, as Senator Molson has
stated, created a special committee to look into this matter. The committee
made substantial amendments to the bill. These were rejected by the government.
The bill came back again and was referred to the Standing Senate Committee on
Banking, Trade and Commerce. That committee introduced an entirely new set of
amendments. They accepted the major provisions of the bill in a compromise, and
they proposed in explicit terms amendments to make possible what the minister
said the bill would actually do. These amendments were largely ignored by the
minister, although he did make minor changes -- two technical amendments. He
stated that the Drug Prices Review Board must deal with any increase in drug
prices over the Consumer Price Index. But there were no sanctions attached to
his amendment, which was an element requested in the Senate amendment....
Further, the Leader of the
Government in the Senate has stated that this is a major piece of legislation
in the government's program. So we are not dealing with something that can be
passed off as an administrative matter. What the Leader of the Government is
saying is that this is crucial to the government's legislative program.
The Senate's wishes from the
beginning have been ignored. As a matter of fact, the minister produced a
pamphlet which he distributed to the drug industry. That pamphlet certainly
implies that the legislation will go through without interference from the
Senate.
What are the obligations of the
Senate? It most certainly has the power to amend this legislation. The question
is whether or not it should use that power. It is clear -- it has been said a
number of times -- that at the end of the day the elected representatives must
prevail. I suggest to you that the elected representatives have a duty to
consult with the people and that, in fact, it is the people who must prevail.
If the elected representatives have indicated from the very beginning through
the mouth of their minister that they will not listen to the Senate, that they
will not make a change of a substantive nature to the bill, then it is my
belief that they have not consulted with the electorate, because they have said
from the beginning that they will make no changes and that they will enter into
no consultation. For that reason I come to the conclusion that this is not the
end of the day.
Senator Roblin made a speech the
other day following a speech that I had made with respect to this matter. I
must say that Senator Roblin and I agree on one point, and that is that this body
should be an elected body. Senator Roblin said that the Senate clearly has the
legal authority and the constitutional right to amend the legislation. With
that I agree. Then he went on to the question of a convention.
What bothers me is that if we are
not prepared to insist on our amendments when the minister and the government
have said, `We will not listen to you no matter what you do,' then we lose all
legitimacy as a legislative body and we should be abolished.(Senator Everett)
Is there a convention that somehow
removes the right of the Senate to exercise that power? The analogy that he
used was that the Governor General has the right in certain circumstances to
refuse to assent to legislation. In fact, the Governor General does not do
that. A convention has arisen, but that is a convention that has arisen out of
an election that was fought when Lord Byng was Governor General. The public
clearly had an opportunity to express its view and stated that the Governor
General should not exercise that power. Such a view has not been expressed in
relation to the Senate. Therefore, I think we can distinguish the convention
that applies to the Governor General from any convention that applies to the
Senate. In fact, I think if one were to say that the Senate should not exercise
its power, one might well say to the judges, "You should not exercise your
power because you have not been elected." We do have the power; we were
given it at the time of Confederation. It is interesting to note that for the time
being that power has been brought up to date by the Meech Lake conference.
Senator Roblin goes on to ask the
question: "When will this chamber present itself for endorsation as the
elected chamber has to do?" It seems to me to be pretty obvious that,
while we do not stand for election, if we were to refuse this legislation; if
we were to insist upon our amendments, we would stand for endorsation. There
would be an immediate move by the government to do something to change the
powers of the Senate, and the public would eventually decide, as it did in the
matter of Lord Byng. We would be put to the test. We are not above having to
present ourselves for endorsation for anything we do.
Senator Roblin goes on to say that
we do not have political legitimacy. Again, I say we may not have immediate
political legitimacy, but what we do in the end must be legitimate in political
terms.
The Globe and Mail has stated as
follows: "In flouting the convention that the Commons prevails, the Senate
is abusing a fundamental condition of representative government."
The Montreal Gazette states that
the Senate has a duty to know its place, and invites proposals for reform or
abolition. If that is the case, then does that not argue that all we really
have an obligation and a right to do is to comment on the legislation from the
other place? When it passes us by we simply say, "Well, you should change
this, you should do that, but if you do not choose to do that it is perfectly
fine with us." If that is the only right of the Senate, then we could get
a better job done at a devil of a lot less money by appointing a committee for
that purpose.
The Senate means a lot more to me
than just that. If it cannot exercise its legislative power -- if that is what
the Globe and Mail and the Gazette are saying, namely, "You must not
exercise your legislative power" -- then there is no reason for the Senate
to exist at all. What the government should do -- and I hope that they do it in
consequence of the history of this legislation -- is consider amending the
powers of the Senate to what they see as being the powers that we should be
exercising. There is no question that we have the power; there is no question
that we have the legitimacy. However, there is a question as to whether or not
we should exercise that power. If we will not be able to do it -- if all we are
is a nice body of commentary on what the House of Commons does -- then I agree
with Senator Roblin. He said that "any Senate other than this one would be
better for the future of the country." I think that that is quite true.
This is a constitutional matter. This is a matter that goes to the root of
whether the Senate means anything.
Senator Roblin: In expressing his opinion about the issue
that has been put before us, the battle has been fairly joined, because there
is the position taken by Senator Everett, which I agree is constitutionally and
legally correct, that this body has the capacity to thwart or to deny the
policies approved by the House of Commons. That particular view of our
political situation has to be reconciled with the principles of responsible
government. I say to this chamber that it cannot be done. You must make your
choice as to whether you will stand up for the right of this Senate to
contradict the House of Commons and to thwart their will, or as to whether you
will accept the principles of responsible government.
What are the principles of
responsible and representative government? In this issue I think they are clear
in every respect. That is that the government as represented in the House of
Commons has the right to govern the country. It has earned the right to govern
the country, because it has been successful in a general election and it still
retains within the House of Commons the power to command a majority of those who
sit in that chamber. That is the principle of responsible and representative
government. To say that by any combination of words or ideas a body such as
this that is appointed, not elected, has the right, when the day is done, to
contradict, to thwart, to prevent and to stultify the policies of a government
which is elected to carry on the administration of the country is the question
that is before us.
Some of us senators have told the
House of Commons what we think is wrong with this bill. We have discharged that
duty of revising the legislation to the best of our ability, but that is where
our responsibility ceases.
I take the view that you have to
make up your mind as to whether you wish to stand with Senator Everett and say
that we will not accept this bill for reasons which seem good to him, or
because we have the right both legally and constitutionally to do so -- or
whether we should say that there is a higher principle which we have to take
into account, the principle of responsible government.
That is the argument in a nutshell.
You have to decide which one of those stands you will take. I believe that the
principles of responsible government come first. Whether it is because I once
ran for election that I have been indoctrinated with this principle of
election, of responsibility and representation or not, I do not know. To me the
answer to the issue is perfectly clear: We must say that we believe in this
country in the principle of representative and responsible government. That
means that the government that is supported by the House of Commons, has been
elected by the people, and which still commands the majority in that House, has
the right, the duty and the responsibility to run the government and to have
its measures approved, and this branch of the legislature should not take upon
itself the onerous responsibility of denying that principle of responsible and
representative government.
I, for one, stand shoulder to
shoulder with those who say that the Senate should not consider itself to be a
rubber stamp and that we are not going to approve whatever comes before us
without any comment, reservation or changes. We have the right to propose
amendments, to propose changes, and we do. We have the perfect right to send
those changes to the House of Commons and ask them what they think about them.
The House of Commons has the duty, through the government to decide how it will
react to proposals we have made.
In some cases they accept them.
Indeed, in terms of the present argument we are having today, a number of
proposals, although some say not the major ones -- have been accepted. However,
if the House of Commons, after two tries in this instance, decides that it will
not accept the advice the Senate has given it, then I think our responsibility
is discharged. We have done our duty. As some senators say, "One of our
responsibilities is not to lend ourselves to early passage of legislation we do
not agree with, to give public opinion time to build." We have certainly
done that.
To say that we have the constitutional
right and legal authority to vote against the bill at this stage may well be
true. But it clashes with, in fact it runs headlong into, the principle of
responsible government and the principle of representative government, a course
which I am not prepared to advise.
I was very interested in the arcane
argument which my friend put forth to the effect that we really are responsible
to the people. I did not quite follow how he came to that conclusion, but he
left me with a clear impression that somewhere down the line there is probably
a general election on the fate of the Senate, and that in the course of time,
according to the political process, that may be considered to be a vindication,
or otherwise by the people of what the Senate is doing. I must say, "Good
luck." That is a little bit removed from any kind of responsible
government that I ever heard of. I think that responsible and representative
government means that men and women who want to hold public office stand up and
get themselves elected by the people, or not, as the case may be. That is how
you get public responsibility, and there is no element of that that can be
attached to our positions here in the Senate. I am here until I am 75, and, to
use the expression of my dear friend, Dr. Forsey, even the Archbishop of
Canterbury could not get me out of this place under the present Constitution
unless I committed some crime. The public cannot get at me. No matter what I do
respecting Bill C-22 I am safe from public opprobrium -- or public praise, as
reflected in an election process. I do not see how you can get around that.
It is perfectly true that the
Senate may be abolished. I hope it is not. I hope it is reformed; I hope it is
elected. When we make those reforms we should also b careful to introduce
mechanisms which will enable us to deal with logjams such as the one we have at
the present time. Whether the Senate continues to be appointed or if it is
elected, a change should be made to ensure that the principles of responsible
government are incorporated into whatever we have to do.
It seems to me that the issue is
very simple: Are you going to stand on the letter of the constitution even if
it flies in the face of the principles of representative responsible government
that has been developed in this nation and elsewhere over the years? I think
not.
I think we have done our duty. We
have expressed our view. I would ask you to consider the bizarre course which
the whole of this debate has taken. The Special Committee of the Senate on Bill
C-22 brought in recommendations which, in the words of Senator Molson
"...would gut the bill." One would have thought that that was a very
important situation.
A second committee dealt with the
matter and it threw out all of those things. They said they were not going to
bother about those principles that the first committee had in mind. When the
bill was referred to the Standing Senate Committee on Banking, Trade and
Commerce, what did that committee do? Did it reaffirm the position of the
special committee? No, it introduced a new set of ideas, none of which had
anything to do with the recommendations produced by the first committee. They
were abandoned; they were jettisoned. A new set of recommendations was brought
in, recommendations that were of a far less fundamental character than those
introduced in the first step.
What are we asked to do now? We are
asked to say, "Well, we did not take our stand on the main issues. We did
not take our stand on the first report, which was vital to the bill, but now,
when we have a much watered down and modified set of suggestions, we are going
to take our stand and throw the bill out on that account." In other words,
we have swallowed the camel and we are straining at the gnat. I have never
heard of anything so ridiculous in my life. For this Senate to say that we are
going to accept the decision of the House of Commons not to agree with our
important changes to this bill and that, by George, we are going to stand our
ground and we are not going to accept the fact that they won't accept these
relatively minor changes in the bill is a bizarre performance.
It is on that ground that we are
being asked to violate the principle of representative and responsible
government of this nation. I will have nothing to do with it.