Point of Order
April 3, 1990
Public Bills: report stage; motions to delete clauses
Hon. John Fraser
Speaker of the House
Ruling Text
The Speaker:
The honourable Member for Ottawa—Vanier raises a point which is certainly not unexpected under the circumstances. I want to make it very clear to honourable Members that I have made a ruling, but having said that, it is the right of honourable members at any time in the future to raise matters of order with the Chair. This is some indication of my thinking on the matter.
I say to the honourable Member for Gloucester that I am sorry that there was not a chance for consultation but in this case, there wasn't. Honourable Members know also that all table officers and the Chair were very busily engaged yesterday and last night on not just this matter but others. I will not say anything more than that.
If the honourable Member for Ottawa—Vanier wants to raise this matter at another time, of course he is completely free to do so. I thank him for recognizing that when a ruling is made, he has to accept that. This is an example that can be used in discussion at another time and I would certainly not in any way make it impossible for the matter to be raised.
The honourable Member knows that these are not always easy decisions to make, especially with a bill which is very contentious, and I am aware of that. It is why I pointed out to honourable Members that, at least at the moment, it would be very hard to say that there will not be very extensive debating time at report stage...
As I indicated to the honourable Member for Ottawa—Vanier and all Members a moment ago, any time Members want to rise on a matter of order in which they question or wish to consult with the Speaker, or make recommendations to the Speaker and through the Speaker to other Members of the House, that is a perfectly normal practice here. I am not going to preclude that.
I also point out that the House has the power to change the Standing Orders and I refer specifically to Standing Order 76(5). Those standing orders give very strong powers of selection of motions to the Speaker. That is where the authority is given to me by all Members of the House. If Members want to change that, that is a matter for Members to consider.
F0516-e 34-2 1990-04-03.
[1]
Debates, April 3, 1990, p. 10126.
Edit Metadata
Holding
"The Speaker's authority to select motions at report stage is granted by the House under Standing Order 76(5), and while the current ruling stands, members may raise the matter again or seek to change the Standing Orders."
AI Summary
The Speaker defends a ruling on the selection of motions at report stage by citing the authority granted under Standing Order 76(5).
AI Analysis
- Outcome
- Other
- Tone
- Conciliatory
- Procedural Stage
- Report Stage of a Public Bill
- Significance
Low
High