Another Conservative Victory for Democratic
Reform
May 9, 2007
When our new Conservative Government took office on
February 6, 2006, we finally had power to enact significant
change. Yet, it was immediately apparent that in this
minority Parliament, the opposition parties intended to
block many of our long-held democratic, judicial and fiscal
reforms.
Yet we didn’t give up. We knew it would take respectful
negotiation, cooperation and, yes, some minor compromise,
in order to move forward with as much of our legislative
agenda as possible.
In a clear demonstration that our perseverance has paid
off, an important government bill became law last week.
While it is far from the first piece of legislation we’ve
successfully enacted, it holds great significance for
our Conservative democratic reform agenda.
Bill C-16 sets fixed dates for federal elections in Canada.
The next general election will be held October 19, 2009,
unless the current government loses the confidence of
the House before then.
Should that happen, any election following majority election
wins would be held on the third Monday in October in the
fourth calendar year following the previous election.
Federal governments will no longer be able to manipulate
election dates to their partisan advantage. The bill received
Royal Assent on Friday, May 3rd, meaning it made it through
the House of Commons, as well as the Senate. And that
is a victory in itself.
The Liberal opposition has been using its majority in
the Senate to block our Government’s democratic
reform legislation. They tried it with the Federal Accountability
Act and now, Liberal Senators are blocking Bill S-4 which
would limit the terms of Senators to eight years.
All the more justification for our Government’s
introduction of Bill C-43 which will give Canadians a
direct voice in the selection of Senators. And it further
highlights the significance of Prime Minister Stephen
Harper’s announcement that he intends to appoint
Albertan Bert Brown to the Red Chamber.
When Liberal Senator Dan Hays retires this summer, the
Prime Minister will have his first opportunity to appoint
a democratically-elected Senator who received the endorsement
of more than 300,000 Alberta voters in that province’s
Senate elections in 2004.
Our next challenge on the democratic reform front involves
two other pieces of legislation our government introduced
this week.
During the Liberal leadership race candidates skirted
federal laws to limit political donations by instead accepting
over $3-million in “loans” from wealthy individuals
with no guarantee they were to be paid back. Bill C-54
will amend the Canada Elections Act to eliminate, once
and for all, whether by donation OR loans, the influence
of rich, wealthy individuals from the political process.
Meanwhile, Bill C-55 proposes to expand voter opportunity
by adding two more advance polling days, one on the Sunday
eight days before Election Day, and another one on the
Sunday immediately before Election Day. This will give
busy, hardworking Canadians, with school, work and family
responsibilities, additional opportunities to vote so
they can better hold their Government accountable.
There may indeed be resistance to these measures from
the opposition but I’m confident that if we “never
give up”, we will succeed in our ongoing quest to
bring openness and transparency to Parliament.
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