Emergency Debates
The Standing Orders provide Members with an
opportunity to give their immediate attention to a pressing matter by moving a
debatable adjournment motion. A Member may request leave from the Speaker
“to make a motion for the adjournment of the House for the purpose of
discussing a specific and important matter requiring urgent
consideration”. [51]
Furthermore, the matter “must relate to a genuine
emergency” [52]
and, if the request is granted by the Speaker, the House is permitted to debate
the topic at an early opportunity, forgoing the usual 48 hours’ notice
period.
Until the turn of the century, any Member,
at virtually any time in the proceedings, could introduce a new matter for
discussion by moving the adjournment of the House. Since the adjournment motion
could be moved at any time and was always subject to debate, the result would be
an interruption of the business then before the House, often leading to the
disruption of the entire day’s program. In 1906, the government of the day
decided to remedy this situation and implemented a new rule, the ancestor to the
present Standing Order, whereby debate would be permitted only on adjournment
motions which dealt with definite matters of urgent public
importance. [53]
From 1906 to 1968, motions under the
emergency debate rule were considered immediately after they had been accepted
for debate. This meant that other business was put aside. In December 1968, the
House amended the rule to have the debate begin at 8:00 p.m., except on Fridays
when it would begin at 3:00 p.m., if proceeded with the same
day. [54]
This still
resulted in a conflict and a displacement of the regular business of the House.
When the regular evening sittings of the House were abolished in
1982, [55]
the conflict
between emergency debates and the regular business of the House was eliminated
except for Fridays.
As one Speaker noted, an emergency debate
should be on a topic “that is immediately relevant and of attention and
concern throughout the
nation”. [56]
Thus, matters of chronic or continuing concern, such as economic conditions,
unemployment rates and constitutional matters, have tended to be set aside
whereas topics deemed to require urgent consideration have included work
stoppages and strikes, natural disasters, and international crises and events.
At various times other topics such as fisheries, forestry, agriculture and the
fur trade industry have been judged acceptable; for example, there have been
several emergency debates on grain-related topics since 1968, and since 1984
four emergency debates have been held in regard to the fishing industry in
Canada. Topics considered highly partisan in nature are not as readily
approved. [57]
Initiating Debate
Any Member, be it a private Member or a
Minister, [58]
who
wishes to move the adjournment of the House to discuss a specific and important
matter requiring urgent consideration must give the Speaker written notice of
the matter he or she wishes to propose for discussion at least one hour prior to
rising in the House to make the formal
request. [59]
At the
conclusion of the ordinary daily routine of
business, [60]
any
Member who has filed an application with the Speaker rises to ask the Speaker
for leave to move the adjournment of the House to debate the issue outlined in
the application. [61]
The Member then makes a brief statement, normally by simply reading the text of
the application filed with the
Speaker. [62]
No
discussion or argument is allowed in the
presentation [63]
because, as one Speaker stressed, a lengthy statement may provoke
debate. [64]
However,
occasionally a Member will be permitted to expand on the application if the
Chair indicates that the additional information could be of assistance in
reaching a decision. [65]
If more than one notice has been forwarded
to the Speaker, Members will be recognized in the order applications were
received. [66]
If the
time set aside in the day’s order of business for hearing the application
is not reached, or if the House decides to proceed to other business, for
example, by adopting a motion to move to the Orders of the Day during Routine
Proceedings, then the Chair cannot hear applications for emergency debates.
These applications must be refiled at the next sitting of the House unless
unanimous consent is granted for the Speaker to hear them at some other time
during the sitting. [67]
The timeliness of an application is very
important. On one occasion, the Speaker advised a Member who had risen to
present his application which had been filed on a previous day to refile
it. [68]
Although the
House may grant a Member unanimous consent to present an application which had
not been filed that
day, [69]
the Chair has
expressed reservations about holding over applications. One Speaker stated that
a matter which requires urgent action one day may not necessarily demand the
same attention the next day, or conversely may be even more critical, a
determination that should be left to the discretion of the Member who filed the
application. [70]
On
one occasion, applications were filed during a lengthy recess of the House and
were heard at the conclusion of the ordinary routine of business the first day
the House resumed sitting. [71]
Discretionary Responsibility of the Speaker
Having heard an application for an
emergency debate, the Speaker decides without debate whether or not the matter
is specific and important enough to warrant urgent consideration by the
House. [72]
In deciding
whether or not to approve a request for an emergency debate, the Chair is guided
by the Standing Orders, the authorities and practice.
The Speaker is not required to give reasons
when granting or refusing a request for an emergency
debate. [73]
Nonetheless, from time to time reasons are offered, although Chair occupants
have tried to refrain from this practice in order to prevent the build-up of
jurisprudence which could itself become a subject of a debate in the
Chamber. [74]
Criteria for Decision
Although the Standing Orders give
considerable discretion to the Speaker in deciding if a matter should be brought
before the House for urgent consideration, certain criteria must be weighed. The
Speaker determines whether a matter is related to a genuine emergency which
could not be brought before the House within a reasonable time by other means,
such as during a Supply
day. [75]
To do this,
consideration is given to the importance and specificity of the
issue [76]
and the
degree to which the matter falls within the administrative responsibilities of
the government or could come within the scope of ministerial
action. [77]
The Speaker then considers whether the
request meets certain other criteria. The matter being raised for discussion
must contain only one
issue. [78]
The motion
to adjourn the House for an emergency debate cannot revive discussion on a
matter previously debated in this way during the
session [79]
nor may it
raise a question of
privilege. [80]
In
addition, the motion cannot deal with a matter normally debatable only by means
of a substantive motion for which notice has been given and which calls for a
decision of the House. [81]
Other conditions which have evolved from
decisions of previous Speakers are also considered. Chair occupants have
established that the subject matter proposed should not normally be of an
exclusively local or regional interest nor be related to only one specific group
or industry, [82]
and
should not involve the administration of a government
department. [83]
Applications to debate ongoing matters have been
rejected [84]
as have
applications to debate matters arising out of the business of the same
session, [85]
Senate
proceedings, [86]
matters before the courts or other administrative
bodies [87]
and
non-confidence or censure
motions. [88]
Furthermore, the Chair has ruled that an emergency debate cannot be held to
debate the interpretation of a Standing
Order [89]
nor may it
be “used as a vehicle for the purpose of airing statements made outside
the House by organizations or people who are not answerable or responsible to
this
chamber.” [90]
In
addition, one Speaker ruled that the emergency debate provisions cannot be used
to debate “items which, in a regular legislative program of the House of
Commons and regular legislative consideration, can come before the House by way
of amendments to existing statutes, or in any case will come before it in other
ways.” [91]
However, in one exceptional circumstance,
an application was approved for an emergency debate on “the sudden and
unexpected revelation of events which [had] taken place in the past, in that
they might precipitate a course of conduct which, if allowed to continue
unchecked, would certainly classify itself as an emergency and a matter of
urgent
consideration.” [92]
Finally, the Speaker may take into account
the general wish of the House to have an emergency debate and grant a request
for an emergency
debate. [93]
Similarly,
the Chair has periodically allowed an emergency debate on an issue which was not
necessarily urgent within the meaning conferred by the rule, but was one on
which the parliamentary timetable prevented any discussion in a timely
manner. [94]
The responsibility of deciding whether or
not an issue is an acceptable topic for an emergency debate is occasionally
taken out of the hands of the Chair. There have been instances when the House
itself has unanimously decided to hold an emergency debate, sometimes by means
of a special
order. [95]
On one
noteworthy occasion, the Speaker was not required to render a decision on a
number of similar applications because later in the sitting unanimous consent
was granted for the introduction of a bill on the same topic, and the House
decided to proceed immediately to debate on the motion for the second reading of
the bill. [96]
Frequently, the Speaker defers the decision
on an application for an emergency debate until later in the day when the
proceedings are interrupted for the purpose of announcing the
decision. [97]
In one
exceptional case, the Speaker did not return to the House with a decision until
the following day. [98]
The Standing Orders specify that not more
than one motion to adjourn the House for an emergency debate may be moved in any
sitting; [99]
however,
more than one application may be made and when this occurs, the Speaker chooses
which one, if any, is acceptable. If more than one request for an emergency
debate on the same topic is made in the same sitting and found acceptable, the
Speaker grants leave to move the adjournment of the House to the Member who
first submitted an acceptable
application. [100]
Timing of Debate
The Standing Orders provide that an
emergency debate must occur between the hours of 8:00 p.m. and 12:00 midnight on
the day a request for one is granted, unless the Speaker directs that the motion
be considered the next sitting day at an hour to be specified
later. [101]
The House
has also periodically adopted special orders setting a time for an emergency
debate. [102]
In one
case, an application for an emergency debate was granted at a time when the
House had extended its sitting hours in
June. [103]
When an emergency debate is scheduled to be
held at 8:00 p.m., the sitting is suspended at the ordinary hour of daily
adjournment; the House meets again at 8:00 p.m. when the Member who was granted
leave moves the motion, “That this House do now
adjourn.” [104]
Practice has been that when an emergency debate is scheduled for 8:00 p.m. on
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, the normal Adjournment Proceedings do
not take place, given that the motion before the House is the same. However,
such proceedings have been held by unanimous consent; in these cases, following
debate on the Adjournment Proceedings, the motion to adjourn has been deemed
withdrawn and the sitting suspended until 8:00
p.m. [105]
On
occasion, unanimous consent has also been granted for the suspension of the
sitting prior to the ordinary hour of daily adjournment in order to give Members
an opportunity to prepare for an emergency
debate. [106]
Except on Friday, emergency debates usually
take place outside the normal sitting hours. However, on Friday or if the
Speaker sets down a time at the next sitting that is within the normal sitting
hours, the Standing Orders provide that emergency debates take precedence. The
Speaker would then determine when any other business that has been superseded by
an emergency debate should be considered or disposed
of. [107]
Emergency debates on Friday begin as soon
as the Speaker finds the application
acceptable. [108]
If
the application is made and granted immediately following the conclusion of
Routine Proceedings, debate commences at approximately 12:15 p.m. and continues
until 4:00 p.m., at which time the motion “That this House do now
adjourn” is deemed adopted. Approximately two to two-and-a-half hours of
House business are displaced by an emergency debate held on this day because the
ordinary hour of adjournment on Friday is 2:30 p.m. Since this Standing Order
came into effect in
1987, [109]
no
emergency debates have been held on Friday, although on two occasions the
Speaker has deferred such a debate until the following Monday at 8:00
p.m. [110]
Rules of Debate
During an emergency debate, no Member may
speak for more than 20
minutes [111]
and
there is no questions and comments
period. [112]
However,
frequently by unanimous consent the length of speeches has been reduced to 10 or
15 minutes to allow as many Members as possible to
speak. [113]
The
etablished rules of debate apply to these emergency
debates. [114]
As
such, as with all other motions to adjourn, the motion to adjourn the House to
discuss an important and urgent matter is not
amendable. [115]
Interruption and Termination of Debate
As noted above, once underway, an emergency
debate takes precedence over all other business. From Monday to Thursday, no
conflict should arise if the debate takes place after the normal adjournment
hour. In the case of a debate taking place on a Friday, in addition to
approximately 90 minutes scheduled for Government Business, the debate also
displaces one hour of Private Members’ Business. This, however, is dealt
with in the Standing Orders which specifically prohibit an interruption for
Private Members’
Business. [116]
Since the wording of the motion for an
emergency debate is simply, “That this House do now adjourn”, at the
conclusion of the debate, the House is not required to render a decision on the
matter under
discussion. [117]
At
12:00 midnight (4:00 p.m. on Friday) or when no Member rises to speak, the
motion is declared carried by the Speaker and the House adjourns until the next
sitting day. [118]
If
the debate is held during the regular sitting hours of the House and concludes
prior to the ordinary hour of adjournment, the motion is deemed withdrawn and
the House continues with other
business. [119]
The Standing Orders allow a Member to
propose a motion to continue the debate beyond 12:00 midnight (4:00 p.m. on
Friday) if the motion is moved in the hour preceding the time the debate would
normally adjourn, that is, between 11:00 p.m. and midnight (between 3:00 and
4:00 p.m. on
Friday). [120]
If
fewer than 15 Members rise to object to this motion, the motion is deemed
adopted. A handful of debates have been extended past midnight pursuant to the
Standing Orders, [121]
while several have been prolonged by unanimous
consent. [122]
There have been occasions when the House
has wanted to express itself on the topic of an emergency debate by adopting a
motion or resolution. In 1970, the House held an emergency debate on the
Nigerian-Biafran conflict; pursuant to a special order made earlier in the
sitting, the debate was interrupted at 10:30 p.m., the House adopted a motion on
the same subject and then adjourned without question
put. [123]
In 1983,
following an emergency debate regarding the shooting down of a South Korean
civilian aircraft by the Soviet Union, the motion to adjourn the House was
deemed withdrawn, the House adopted a resolution denouncing the actions of the
Soviet government, and then adjourned until the next sitting day by unanimous
consent. [124]
In
1989, an emergency debate on the Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing, China,
was temporarily interrupted to allow the House to adopt a resolution condemning
the massacre. [125]