At the time this article was
written Peter Milliken was a Member of Parliament for Kingston and the Islands
From the earliest times, Parliament
has claimed control over the expenditure of public monies. Consequently, the
business of supply has come to be regarded as one of the principal functions of
the House of Commons. Indeed, the Constitution Act of 1982 (s. 53) states that:
"Bills for appropriating any part of the Public Revenue, or for imposing
any Tax or Impost shall originate in the House of Commons." This section
has remained unchanged since 1867.
The Crown, being the executive
power, has the responsibility for the raising and spending of money. Acting
through responsible Ministers, the Crown makes known to the Commons the
financial necessities of government. The Commons grants such aids and supplies
as are necessary to meet the demands of the Crown and provides through taxes
and other sources of revenue the ways and means to meet the supplies that have
been granted. The Crown, therefore, demands money, the Commons grants it and
the Senate assents to the grant. The Commons does not vote any money except for
the necessities of the country as defined by the Crown.1
The current arrangement for
disposing of the business of supply in the House provides that the government
submit its Estimates to the House of Commons on or before March 1 of each year
for the ensuing fiscal year, which commences on April l.
Once the Estimates are tabled, they
are referred to the various House Standing Committees for study. During the
period for consideration of the Estimates, days are set aside for the House to
discuss issues chosen by the opposition. On certain of these days the
opposition may present a motion which is votable. The loss of one of these
motions could result in a loss of confidence in the Government, forcing its
retirement from office or the dissolution of the House.
The Standing Committees study the
Estimates which are then reported back to the House. If they are not actually
reported back they are "deemed" to have been reported by May 31. Once
the Estimates have been approved an Appropriation Act based on them is
presented to the House and usually passes all stages in a very short time. The Appropriation
Act is then forwarded to the Senate for consideration and ultimately for
Royal Assent.
The passing of Appropriation
Acts is one of two means by which the Government may lawfully access money
in the Consolidated Revenue Fund of Canada for the payment of the expenses of
carrying on the Public Service of Canada. There is one alternative method and
that is by the use of Governor General's Special Warrants.
Canadians went to the polls for a
general election on November 2l, 1988. Parliament was reconvened thereafter at
the earliest possible date, namely December l2, 1988. No supply, that is, the
granting of public funds to the government, was requested from the Commons by
the Sovereign's representative in the course of the Speech from the Throne. The
speech dealt solely with the issue of Free Trade and the ratification of the
Free Trade Agreement with the United States.
The session lasted for two weeks
and on December 30 when the sitting adjourned, only one item of government
business had been introduced and dealt with in the House and that was the Free
Trade Agreement. The House adjourned on December 3O with the intent to have a
lengthy break before resuming business on March 6. In January, the Government
ran out of funds required for the Public Service and a Governor General's
Special Warrant was approved in the amount of $80,851,000 to authorize payment
of those expenses. In February, further funds were required and an additional
Special Warrant was issued in the amount of $507,357,918. Subsequently it was
decided to prorogue the then existing session of Parliament and recall
Parliament into new session on April 3, and the appropriate proclamations were
issued by Her Excellency the Governor General.
On April 3, at the recall of
Parliament, once again there was no mention of supply in the Speech from the
Throne, a curious omission. The next day the House passed a Special Resolution
dealing with the business of supply and extending the dates for approval of the
Estimates until a date in September.
Meanwhile on April 1, immediately
before the recall of Parliament the Government obtained another Special Warrant
in the amount of $6.2 billion. This sum was sufficient to defray the expenses
of the Public Service for the period up to approximately the middle of May, it
being assumed that Parliament would adopt and pass an Appropriation Act
for interim supply before that date.
In fact, the Government
subsequently laid before the House a statement explaining the use of the funds
taken by the Special Warrants. But obviously there was no consideration of the
amounts in the House since the Estimates upon which the Warrants had been based
were only tabled after the commencement of the session of April 3. The question
was raised as to whether or not the use of the Special Warrants in this case,
particularly the Warrant on April l, was proper.
Up until 1989 Special Warrants were
used almost exclusively during the period between the dissolution of Parliament
and the recall of a new Parliament following a general election. On only one
occasion had they been used during the time between sessions. The government's
power to issue Special Warrants is derived from Section 30 of the Financial
Administration Act which states:
Where a payment is urgently
required for the public good when Parliament is not in session and there is no
other appropriation pursuant to which the payment may be made, the Governor in
Council, on the report of the President of the Treasury Board that there is no
appropriation for the payment and the report of the appropriate Minister that
the payment is urgently required for the public good, may, by order, direct the
preparation of a special warrant to be signed by the Governor General
authorizing the payment to be made out of the Consolidated Revenue Fund.
In accordance with this Section it
is readily apparent that the expenditures contemplated must be of an
extraordinary nature. Consequently, the precedent created in 1988 - 1989 raises
a fundamental issue as to the propriety of the use of this section of the Financial
Administration Act and as to Parliament's control of the public purse. It
is apparent that none of the expenditures in the April 1, 1989 Special Warrant
was extraordinary or urgent, except that by failing to recall Parliament on
March 6, the government had allowed itself to run out of cash. The Special
Warrant authorized the normal operating expenses of the Government of Canada
for a six week period. These were not extraordinary expenditures within the
strict meaning of the Financial Administration Act.
A Question of Privilege concerning
the propriety of the Special Warrants was raised in the House of Commons on
April 6, 1989. In his decision handed down on May 2, 1989, the Speaker ruled
that: "the government respected all the procedures required by the
House" when it issued the Warrants. However, on the much larger question
of whether or not the Warrants went against constitutional practice because
they were not of an extraordinary nature and Parliament could have easily been
recalled, the Speaker said he cannot:
...sit in judgment on
constitutional or legal matters. That role belongs more properly to the courts
and the administration of justice. Previous Speakers have been very careful in
strictly addressing themselves to matters of a parliamentary or procedural
nature while avoiding dealing with constitutional or legal matters. Similarly,
in this instance, the Chair must restrict its examination to the question of a
possible infraction of the Standing Orders.
After studying the circumstances of
this case to determine whether the ancient rights of Members of Parliament have
been denied in relation to the granting or withholding of supplies, the Chair
concludes that the Government has respected all of the procedures required by
the House. As the Hon. Member for Kingston and the Islands has himself said,
the House will have an opportunity to pronounce itself on the moneys found in
the Special Warrants when the House votes on the next appropriation Bill.2
In the Senate however, objections
to the constitutional propriety of the Warrants were given full voice,
particularly in the proceedings of the Standing Senate Committee on National
Finance. While appearing before the Committee on May 10, former Senator Eugene
Forsey argued that "When Parliament has been recalled and is there to vote
supply, and when Supplementary Estimates have actually been presented, never
before has there been this recourse to the Governor General's Special Warrants,
and I think it is wholly improper ... ."3
Following committee hearings the
Senate chose to amend the Appropriation Act, a virtually unprecedented
move, and return the Bill to the House of Commons. The amendment stated that
the Special Warrants issued in January, March, and April "shall be deemed
to have been legal." This wording would make it clear that though the
issuing of the Warrants was within the letter of the law, it clearly went
against Parliamentary practice and should not be used as precedent by any other
administration.
The Government rejected the Senate
amendment and moved the appropriate motion which was debated briefly in the
House of Commons on May l5. While speaking to the motion, N.D.P. House Leader
Nelson Riis summed up the opposition position by stating that "if the
government had the courage, the decency and the honour to do things
appropriately and the way Canadians want them to be done, this would not have
occurred. The Minister of Justice should be honest and say: `Yes, we have made
a mistake. We have made an error in judgment. We did something rather dastardly
when it comes to the parliamentary process. We should not have done it.'4"
Faced with the government's refusal
to accept the amendment, the Senate ultimately backed down and the Bill passed
without further debate. The issue is whether or not a government can proceed to
govern and help itself to the Consolidated Revenue Fund without the authority
of Parliament by using Special Warrants.
The legal requirement is that
Parliament meet once per year. Accordingly, a government, if it chose to be
unscrupulous, could call Parliament into session for a day, have a Speech from
the Throne and adjourn the House for a year and continue to run the
administrative machinery of government by using Governor General's Special
Warrants. This would clearly be a breach of our Constitutional practice and
would undermine the authority of Parliament by enabling the government to in
effect govern without parliamentary approval of any kind. Given the increasing
use of the regulatory power, it would be easy to understand how a government
might see fit not to bother with any additional legislation but simply live
with the legal status quo.
While this scenario may seem a bit
far fetched or extreme, it is none the less possible. Those who regard the
protection of the rights of the subject as paramount in our system must take a
keen interest in this radical departure from past practice in matters of
supply. In an effort to redress the situation I introducted a Private Members'
Bill, C-211 to amend the Financial Administration Act which was given
first reading on April 10, 1989. It has not yet been debated.
Notes
1. Alistair Fraser, W.F. Dawson and
John Holtby, Beauchesne's Parliamentary Rules and Forms, 6th Edition,
Carswell, p. 183.
2. House of Commons, Debates,
May 2, 1989, p. 1179.
3. Senate, Standing Committee on
National Finance, May 10, 1989, No. 33, p. 14.
4. House of Commons, Debates,
May 15, 1989, p. 1744.