Pubdate: Tue, 04 Nov 2003 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2003, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Campbell Clark TOP-PRIORITY BILLS IN QUESTION Parliament Not Likely to Sit After Next Week OTTAWA -- It appears likely Parliament will not sit after the end of next week, dooming several of Prime Minister Jean Chretien's top-priority bills, such as the legislation to regulate reproductive technology. Instead of closing the Commons this week and keeping the Senate open until Christmas, the government is trying to push a few key bills through the Red Chamber this week, threatening senators that they will have to sit next week, normally a week off, if they delay two top items. The government wants to ensure that the bill to create ethics commissioners for the Commons and Senate and a bill to draw a new electoral map are passed before the session ends, the government whip in the Senate, Senator William Rompkey, said. This also is expected to be Mr. Chretien's last week in the Commons: He will try to avoid the awkward political situation of sitting alongside Paul Martin after Mr. Martin takes over the leadership of the Liberal Party. The practical deadline passed last night for the government to give notice it wants to adjourn the Commons before the Liberal leadership convention. That means Mr. Chretien must prorogue Parliament -- shutting both houses -- if he wants to avoid a Commons sitting after Mr. Martin is crowned the new Liberal leader. Because the Commons is not scheduled to sit next week, Mr. Chretien could wait until the end of next week before proroguing Parliament, while Liberal senators force their chamber to sit next week. The Prime Minister's Office is pushing the passage of the ethics commissioner bill as part of Mr. Chretien's legacy, while the electoral redistribution is seen as essential to allowing Mr. Martin to call a spring election. "Ethics and boundaries are the two highest" priorities, Mr. Rompkey said. "There are maybe three or four that we'd like to get finished this week, and then others if we can. But, you know, there's only so much time." Some MPs on both sides of the House insist that by convention the leader of the majority party in the Commons must take the reins as prime minister without delay. But that leaves the Prime Minister, in the last week of a 40-year career in the Commons, pushing senators to complete about half of the priorities he set for his last sitting of Parliament. While adjourning the Commons would allow the Senate to continue sitting until Christmas, proroguing means neither house can reconvene until the Governor-General reads a new Speech from the Throne. If the government had wanted to force the adjournment of the Commons, it would have had to give a 48-hour notice yesterday to allow enough time to have a debate and vote this week. Yesterday, government House Leader Don Boudria backed off his insistence that the Commons continue sitting through December, and instead took a veiled shot at the Senate for slow work. "Exactly when it would end, I can't say for sure. We're making reasonable progress on legislation -- at least on the House side," he said. The government has now admitted that the Senate will not have time to pass some of the nine bills that Mr. Chretien declared as his priorities at an August meeting of his caucus in North Bay. Bill C-13, which would outlaw human cloning and regulate reproductive technology, will die, as will bill C-17, a public-safety bill with antiterror measures. Bill C-46, a bill to toughen sanctions for stock-market fraud, could be in jeopardy. Two of the nine bills -- legislation to decriminalize marijuana (C-38) and revise family law (C-22) -- will not even reach the Senate. A bill to create criminal sanctions for companies whose negligence causes employee injuries, inspired by the 1992 Westray mine disaster (C-45), has passed. And the government is expected to push through the ethics commissioner bill (C-34), the electoral redistribution bill (C-49), and probably a bill to reform the public service (C-25). A move to prorogue Parliament would shorten the fall sitting of the Commons by three weeks and shave four weeks off the Senate schedule. It would make this year's 105 days of Commons the lightest calendar since 2000, when the House sat only 89 days because the fall session was interrupted by an election. The Commons is usually scheduled to sit about 135 days, but generally chops about 10 days by leaving early each session. It sat 121 days in 2002 and the 131 days in 2001. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake