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Democracy Watch launches national Change.org petition calling on Prime Minister Harper to open Parliament on September 16th as scheduled, and calling on all parties to restrict prorogations
Tuesday, September 3, 2013
OTTAWA – Today, Democracy Watch launched a national petition on Change.org calling for Prime Minister Stephen Harper to open Parliament on September 16th, as scheduled, and for all parties to work together to pass laws restricting the use of prorogation.
“The shut down by Prime Minister Stephen Harper until October of this year, past prorogations by Prime Minister Harper and Prime Minister Chretien and some premiers, and the recent shutdowns of provincial legislatures by B.C. Premier Christy Clark, Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Kathy Dunderdale, and former Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty make it clear that new rules are needed across Canada to ensure fairness and democratic accountability in the opening and shutting down of legislatures,” said Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch.
In early 2010, more than 220,000 Canadians joined a Facebook group against the prorogation of the federal Parliament by Prime Minister Harper, and more than 20,000 protested in demonstrations across the country, but federal opposition parties failed to respond to this broad-based call to work together during the minority government situation to change the Parliament of Canada Act to set rules on the opening and closing of Parliament.
In most countries in the world, including the parliamentary democracies of Britain, Australia and New Zealand, the constitution or written constitutional conventions or laws govern when the legislature opens and closes, not the whims of the ruling party leader. A survey of more than 2,000 Canadians commissioned by Your Canada, Your Constitution in December 2012 showed that 84% want such clear, written rules established in Canada, enforced by the Supreme Court of Canada.
Democracy Watch is calling on Canadians to sign the petition calling for Prime Minister Harper to open Parliament as scheduled and for federal politicians to pass a clear and specific law regarding prorogations including the following:
- only allowing the Prime Minister alone to prorogue when the legislature is already adjourned, and only for the adjournment time period.
- requiring approval of 2/3 of MPs in the House of Commons before a prorogation can happen when the House is open.
- limiting the length of prorogation to a maximum of 2 weeks.
- requiring that the legislature be opened within 30 days after each election.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:
Tyler Sommers, Coordinator of Democracy Watch
Tel: (613) 241-5179
[email protected]
Democracy Watch’s Change.Org Petition
Ethics loopholes allow politicians to lobby for their own interests, key changes are needed to close these loopholes — CBC.ca
Edmonton MLA Peter Sandhu aggressively lobbied ministers and department officials for changes to a provincial law which would benefit his financially troubled home-building company.
Government accountability rules can cause problems if they are vague — Canada.com
Link to Canada.com article
Political financing bill needs to be strengthened
Re: “Political loans bill ‘basically dead,’ says NDP MP Scott” (The Hill Times, Aug. 12). I would like to see the new mega-bill introduce into law all of Democracy Watch’s recommendations from their “Money in Politics Campaign,” including: disclose all donations and loans a week before election day, limit and disclose donations in nomination and party leadership races, impose spending limits in party leadership races, limit and disclose paid volunteer labour provided by organizations, disclose the identity of each individual donor’s employer (as in the U.S.) and direct organizational affiliations, and increase the penalty for breaking these laws to include jail time. I also think that these recommendations, as well as the current federal political financing and lobbying laws, must apply to provinces as well. Corporations, unions, and groups representing their interests should not be allowed to donate to any kind of political campaign anywhere in Canada, nor should they be allowed to lobby in secret. Democracies die behind closed doors.
Something’s got to give on Senate reform
Back in March, my debut article pertaining to reforming Canada’s outdated system of government appeared in The Hill Times just as the Senate scandal started making headlines nationwide. My article centered on the possibility to abolish the Senate as a first-stage and possibly reconstituting it as a Triple E Chamber. The Hill Times was the first rag to contain this suggestion.
Democracy Watch calls for fixed election and by-election dates for Ontario
Link to NOW magazine article
Loopholes allow politicians to lobby the day after they leave office
As the Senate draws fire over the spending habits of one of its members, the resignation of a politician in the House of Commons has prompted ethical questions of a different sort.
Loopholes allow politicians to lobby the day after they leave office
Some Canadians wring their hands periodically about creeping Americanization of this country, even though there are still plenty of things that set us apart.
Loopholes allow politicians to lobby the day after they leave office
Letter to the Editor by Democracy Watch Coordinator Tyler Sommers published by iPolitics and the Hill Times, covered by CBC News and The Canadian Press, with CTV News Winnipeg, the Huffington Post, Metro News and 10 other media outlets all publishing the Canadian Press piece, and was quoted in a Canada.com article that was published by 3 Postmedia News newspapers.
Federal Conservative MP Merv Tweed is allowed to lobby his government in secret the day he resigns his seat and becomes President of Omnitrax raliway company because the Conservatives, specifically Minister Tony Clement, have failed to implement the May 2012 recommendations of the House Ethics Committee.
The Committee recommended closing some of the key loopholes that allow for secret, unethical lobbying, especially by former politicians. In his September 2012 response to the Committee, Minister Clement essentially rejected the Committee’s proposed change that would prohibit former politicians from lobbying right after they leave their position, and would require that all paid lobbying activity be disclosed.
As a result, Mr. Tweed will be allowed to lobby his former colleagues in secret up to one day each week, starting the day he leaves.
In fact, because the Conservatives broke their 2006 election promises to close lobbying restriction loopholes, not only MPs but also Cabinet ministers, senior government officials, senators and their staff, and the staff of MPs are all also allowed to lobby for a business the same day they leave their position, due to the 20% loophole, and also the following loopholes:
- all of them can be hired on contract to give advice, while providing free lobbying in secret, because the law does not require registration or disclosure of unpaid lobbying;
- all of them can be hired on contract or work as an employee of a business to lobby in secret about the enforcement, interpretation or application of laws and regulations in secret (which is a huge area of lobbying, especially for big businesses) because the law does not require registration or disclosure of this lobbying, and;
- all of them can, while lobbying, have secret emails, texts, phone calls and even meetings with Cabinet ministers and senior government officials as long as the minister or official initiates the communication or meeting (which they do whenever they want to have secret, unethical relations with a lobbyist) because the law only requires only oral, pre-arranged communications initiated by the lobbyist to be disclosed
For Cabinet ministers, there is a 2-year prohibition in the Conflict of Interest Act on taking jobs with or lobbying for any business or organization or person they had significant official dealings with in their last year in office (1-year for Cabinet staff and appointees and senior government officials). As well, public servants face the same 1-year prohbition under their conflict of interest code). However, all these people are still allowed to take jobs with, or lobby for, other businesses, organizations and people.
Canadians deserve better, especially from the Conservatives who promised to clean up the federal government.
Democracy Watch’s Government Ethics Campaign
Democracy Watch’s submission on the Lobbying Act.