Question of Privilege
December 18, 1989
Misrepresentation of Parliament's role in Government communications respecting the proposed Goods and Services Tax: brochures
Hon. John Fraser
Speaker of the House
Ruling Text
The Speaker:
On November 20, 1989 the honourable Member for Kingston and the Islands raised a question of privilege related to certain pamphlets on the Goods and Services Tax which a constituent of his had informed him were being distributed in a local grocery chain outlet.
In view of the Chair's ruling on October 10, 1989, the honourable Member questioned the propriety of the distribution of the pamphlets. He suggested that this constituted a contempt of the House, pointing out that in the text of the pamphlets the presumption that the GST will be law by January 1991 is everywhere asserted with none of the appropriate references to the legislative process through which the GST must pass.
Later that day, the Minister of Finance rose on a point of order to explain that the pamphlets in question were part of the initial information package prepared by the Department last summer and distributed last August. The Minister assured the House that the distribution contracts for the dissemination of that material had been completed by October and that, subsequent to the Chair's ruling on the advertisements for the GST, steps had been taken to have all offending materials returned to the Department.
The honourable Member for Windsor West intervened to question whether the disputed material was still being distributed.
The Chair undertook to look further into the matter. I have now carefully considered the issue raised by the honourable Member for Kingston and the Islands and the remarks made by the honourable Minister of Finance. It appears that the point at issue is the timing of the removal of the pamphlets from public distribution.
The Chair is satisfied that the material in question was part of the summer advertising campaign and that given the intricacies of the nation-wide distribution of such material some time delays may have occurred in recovering material from that campaign. The Minister has assured the House that the Department had taken appropriate steps to have the material returned to it and has asked, in light of the complaint raised by the honourable Member for Kingston and the Islands, if Members would bring such aberrant cases to his attention so that corrective action may be taken where required.
In light of this information the Chair is satisfied that the honourable Member's complaint has been fairly and expeditiously dealt with and considers the matter settled. If honourable Members have further information to bring to the Chair, the Chair of course will hear further applications.
F0102-e 34-2 1989-12-18.
[1]
Debates, October 10, 1989, pp. 4457-61.
[2]
Debates, November 20, 1989, pp. 5823-4.
[3]
Debates, November 20, 1989, pp. 5854-5.
Edit Metadata
Holding
"The Speaker accepted the Minister's assurance that steps had been taken to recall the offending pamphlets and, considering the complaint fairly dealt with, declared the matter settled."
AI Summary
A ruling that accepted a Minister's explanation for the continued circulation of pre-ruling GST pamphlets, thereby settling a question of privilege on the matter.
AI Analysis
- Outcome
- Other
- Tone
- Conciliatory
- Procedural Stage
- Routine Proceedings
- Significance
Low
High