Conduct of Debate in a Committee of the Whole
Proceedings in a Committee of the Whole are
governed by the Standing Orders as far as may be applicable and by
long-established
practice. [67]
While
Members must be recognized by the Chairman before speaking or moving a motion,
discussions are less formal; Members may occupy, speak and vote from places
other than those regularly assigned to
them, [68]
and they may
be recognized to speak more than once to a
question, [69]
although
they may not share their speaking
time. [70]
The Prime
Minister and Leader of the Opposition have unlimited
time. [71]
Members have
20 minutes at a time to make speeches, to ask questions and to receive
replies. [72]
The
Chairman must apply the 20-minute limit to ensure the Minister or sponsor has an
opportunity to answer a final question within the 20 minutes. As in the House,
where all remarks are addressed to the Speaker, all remarks must be addressed to
the Chairman. [73]
However, in practice, Members often address one another, ask questions and
receive answers
directly. [74]
In these
exchanges, Members should nevertheless always refer to one another by the names
of their ridings as is done in the
House. [75]
The same rules and practices that apply to
motions in the House generally apply in a Committee of the Whole, except that
motions do not require a
seconder. [76]
The
motions “that the Chair rise and report
progress” [77]
and “that the Chairman leave the
Chair” [78]
are
unique to a Committee of the Whole and are decided without debate or amendment.
Once proposed, motions may be withdrawn only by the mover and only with the
unanimous consent of the
Committee. [79]
When an
amendment is moved, debate must proceed on the amendment until it is disposed
of.
Quorum
Under the Constitution Act, 1867, and the Standing Orders of the House, a quorum of 20 Members, including the
Speaker, is required to “constitute a meeting of the House for the
exercise of its
powers”. [80]
Twenty Members is also the quorum for a Committee of the
Whole. [81]
If a Member
draws to the attention of the Chairman a lack of quorum in a Committee of the
Whole, the Chairman counts the
Members. [82]
If 20
Members are not present, the Chairman rises without seeking leave to report
progress and sit again. The Speaker takes the
Chair, [83]
the House
is resumed, the Chairman reports the lack of a quorum and the Speaker counts the
number of Members in the Chamber. If the Speaker finds a quorum, the Committee
resumes its
deliberations. [84]
If
there is no quorum, the bells are rung until there is a quorum, at which time
the Committee resumes its deliberations. If after 15 minutes the bells are still
ringing, the Speaker adjourns the House until the next sitting
day. [85]
Any
proceedings which are brought to a close by a lack of quorum in the House are
allowed to stand and retain their precedence on the Order Paperfor the
next sitting when the Order is called for the House to resolve into a Committee
of the Whole. [86]
At
that time, the Committee resumes its work from the point of interruption.
Relevance and Disorder in a Committee of the Whole
Speeches in a Committee of the Whole must
be strictly relevant to the item or clause under
consideration. [87]
If
a Member’s speech is not relevant to the debate, the Chairman is empowered
to call the Member to order and if, necessary, warn that he or she risks being
reported to the
House. [88]
An
exception which has developed to the rule of relevance is the wide-ranging
debate permitted on Clause 1 (or Clause 2 if Clause 1 only contains the short
title of a bill). [89]
Certain limits have nonetheless been established for consideration of Clause 1,
including proscriptions against repetition of second reading debate and against
anticipation of clause-by-clause
debate. [90]
Moreover,
debate must be confined to the contents of the
bill. [91]
A further
limitation arises when an amendment has been proposed to Clause 1: remarks must
be restricted to the amendment until it has been disposed
of. [92]
The Chairman is empowered to maintain order
in a Committee of the Whole and to decide all questions of
order. [93]
However, if
a Member persists in irrelevance or repetition, refuses to withdraw
unparliamentary remarks or to resume his or her seat when so requested, or if
the proceedings become disorderly and the Chairman is unable to restore decorum
in the Committee, the Chairman may rise and report the incident to the Speaker
without seeking leave of the
Committee. [94]
The
Speaker takes the Chair, receives the report of the Chairman, and deals with the
matter as if the incident had happened in the House and may subsequently name
the Member. [95]
In the
case of unparliamentary language, the Speaker may request the Member to withdraw
the remarks. After the matter has been dealt with, the Committee resumes its
deliberations without a motion to this effect. In extreme cases of disorder in a
Committee of the Whole, the Speaker has taken the Chair without waiting for the
Chairman to
report. [96]
Questions of Privilege
Given that the House rarely sits as a
Committee of the Whole and that when it does, the proceedings are typically
completed in a matter of minutes, questions of privilege are not often raised
today in a Committee of the Whole. The practice regarding the raising of
questions of privilege in a Committee of the Whole is, nonetheless, identical to
that for any standing, legislative or special committee. The Chairman has no
authority to rule that a breach of privilege has
occurred. [97]
The
Chairman hears the question of privilege and may entertain a motion that certain
events which occurred in the Committee should be reported to the
House. [98]
If the
Committee decides that the matter should be reported, then the Chairman rises,
the Speaker resumes the Chair, and the Chairman reports the question of
privilege. [99]
The
Speaker then deals with the matter. If a prima faciecase of privilege is
found by the Speaker, a Member may move a motion dealing with the
matter. [100]
The Speaker will entertain a question of
privilege in regard to a matter that occurred in a Committee of the Whole, only
if the matter has been dealt with first in the Committee of the Whole and
reported accordingly to the
House. [101]
When the House is in a Committee of the
Whole, a Member may not rise on a question of privilege affecting the privileges
of the House in general; however, a Member may move a motion for the Committee
to rise and report progress in order that the Speaker may hear the question of
privilege. [102]
Interruptions
When proceedings in a Committee of the
Whole are interrupted in order for the House to proceed with scheduled items of
daily business (for example, at 2:00 p.m. Monday, Tuesday and Thursday, and
11:00 a.m. on Friday, for Statements by Members and Question Period; or an
interruption for a scheduled recorded division in the House) or if the Committee
is unable to complete its business at the conclusion of the time allotted for
Government
Orders, [103]
the
Chairman interrupts the proceedings and rises. The Speaker takes the Chair and
the Committee reports progress to the House and requests leave to consider its
business again later that day or at the next sitting of the House. The report is
then received by the House and the Committee is granted leave to sit again later
that day or at the next sitting of the
House. [104]
After the
interruption, the Committee may resume sitting if the Order is
called. [105]
If business arises which requires the
attention of the House (for example, a Royal Assent ceremony), the Speaker takes
the Chair immediately without waiting for the Committee to rise and report
progress. [106]
When
the matter which led to the interruption has been dealt with, the Committee
resumes sitting. Messages received from the Senate will not interrupt the
proceedings of the Committee; these messages are only reported to the House by
the Speaker after the Committee has risen and reported and before another Order
of the Day is taken up by the
House. [107]
Extension of Debate
Only when the Speaker is in the Chair, may
a Member move a motion, without notice, to extend the sitting beyond the
ordinary hour of daily adjournment to continue consideration of a particular
item of
business. [108]
When
the House is in a Committee of the Whole, a Member must indicate his intention
to move such a motion; the Chairman interrupts the proceedings and, without
reporting progress, rises so that the motion can be properly moved and disposed
of with the Speaker in the
Chair. [109]
The
motion cannot be debated or
amended. [110]
It
carries automatically unless at least 15 Members who object to it rise in their
places when the Speaker puts the question, in which case the motion is deemed
withdrawn. [111]
On
occasion, the House has adopted special orders extending a sitting in order to
complete consideration of a bill in a Committee of the
Whole. [112]
Closure
The Standing Orders provide the government
with a procedural device to force a decision by the House on any motion or bill
under debate. This device is known as
closure. [113]
Although the limited use of Committees of the Whole in modern practice has
substantially reduced the use of closure there, it may still be invoked. Once
debate has begun in a Committee of the Whole, closure may be applied to a
motion; to the whole committee stage of a bill; to its title, preamble or its
clauses, individually or in groups; or to amendments or sub-amendments.
Furthermore, closure may be moved on clauses of a bill which have not yet been
called. [114]
Before invoking closure of a matter being
considered in a Committee of the Whole, a notice must be given orally at a
previous sitting by a Minister. This notice is normally, but not necessarily,
given while a Committee of the Whole is considering the matter to be
closured. [115]
If
notice is to be given at some other time, the consistent practice is then to
wait for debate on that matter to have been initiated, either on a previous day
or earlier on the same day. When oral notice has been properly given, a Minister
may then move “that the further consideration of any resolution or
resolutions, clause or clauses, section or sections, preamble or preambles, or
title or titles, shall be the first business of the Committee, and shall not
further be
postponed”. [116]
Such a closure motion is moved before the Committee resumes consideration of the
Order to which closure would apply.
Once moved, a closure motion is decided
without debate or
amendment. [117]
The
question is put on the motion and a division may take place. If the motion is
adopted, Members’ participation in the debate is restricted: they may
speak only once on the question to which closure has been applied, and for no
longer than 20
minutes. [118]
The
sitting may be extended but debate concludes no later than 11:00 p.m. that same
day, at which time the Chairman puts all the necessary questions to dispose of
the matter. [119]
After the consideration of a closured bill
is completed, the Chairman reports the bill back to the House with or without
amendment. A motion for concurrence in the bill at report stage is moved and put
without debate. [120]
If the bill is concurred in at report stage and the sitting has not gone beyond
the time normally provided for Government Orders, the House can then proceed
immediately to the third reading stage of the
bill. [121]
If the
bill is concurred in at report stage and the sitting has been extended beyond
the ordinary hour of daily adjournment, the bill is then ordered for third
reading at the next sitting and the House
adjourns. [122]
Time Allocation
The Standing Orders provide a mechanism,
referred to as time allocation, for restricting the length of debate on
bills. [123]
Although
there are certain elements of closure in time allocation, it allows the
government to negotiate with the opposition parties to establish, in advance, a
timetable for the consideration of a public bill at one or more legislative
stages, including debate at the Committee of the Whole stage. Time allocation
has been imposed rarely in a Committee of the Whole; this stems from the fact
that bills which are referred to a Committee of the Whole are generally of a
non-controversial nature and tend to generate little discussion, or deal with
matters of political importance on which arrangements have been made on the use
of House time. [124]
Prohibition Against the “Previous Question”
The motion “That this question be now
put” is referred to as the “previous question”. Its purpose,
when moved and debated in the House, is to achieve one of two possible
objectives: either to prevent any amendment to the main motion and force a
direct vote on it, or to delay a vote on the main motion by prolonging
debate. [125]
The moving of the previous question is
prohibited in a Committee of the Whole as it is in any
committee. [126]
Given
that a bill is referred to a Committee of the Whole for clause-by-clause
consideration, the moving of the previous question would prevent Members from
proposing amendments and considering the legislation to the fullest extent
possible.
Adjournment of Debate
A Committee of the Whole has no power to
adjourn its own sitting or to adjourn consideration of any matter to a future
sitting. [127]
If its
consideration of a matter is not concluded by the ordinary hour of daily
adjournment, or if the House is scheduled to proceed with Private Members’
Business or the Adjournment Proceedings, the Chairman interrupts the proceedings
and rises. The Speaker takes the Chair and the Committee reports progress to the
House and requests leave to consider its business again at the next
sitting. [128]
The
Speaker asks, as a matter of form, “When shall the report be received?
Now. When shall the Committee have leave to sit again? At the next sitting of
the House. So ordered.”
During consideration of a bill or motion in
a Committee of the Whole, a Member may move “That the Chairman rise and
report
progress”. [129]
A motion that “the Chairman report progress” has the same effect as
a motion for the House to adjourn
debate. [130]
In other
words, if this motion is adopted, no further debate can occur on the matter
under consideration that day. If this motion is rejected, the Committee
continues sitting and the question cannot be put again until some intermediate
proceeding has taken
place. [131]
After a Committee of the Whole has risen,
reported progress and received leave to sit again at the next sitting of the
House, when the Order is next called, the House goes into a Committee of the
Whole and the Committee resumes its
business. [132]
Termination of Debate
The proceedings in a Committee of the Whole
may be brought abruptly to a close if a Member moves a motion “That the
Chairman leave the Chair” and the motion is adopted. Such a motion is
always in order, is not debatable and, if adopted, supersedes the question then
before the
Committee. [133]
If
the motion is put and agreed to, the Committee rises without a report to the
House, and the matter before the Committee disappears from the Order
Paper. [134]
If
the Committee rejects the motion for the Chairman to leave the Chair, the
question cannot be put again without some intermediate proceeding having taken
place. [135]
Divisions
When the Chairman puts the question on a
bill, clause or motion, if one or more Members object, they may request that a
division, or standing vote, take
place; [136]
if no
such request is made, the Chairman declares the bill, clause or motion
carried/adopted or negatived, on division (that is, signalling opposition
without calling for a standing
vote). [137]
It is not
necessary to have five Members rise to force a standing vote as is required in
the House. [138]
In a
Committee of the Whole, the names of Members voting for or against an item are
not recorded and no bells are rung to call Members in to
vote. [139]
Those
Members present in the Chamber simply rise in rows and are counted by a Table
Officer. Members do not have to be in their allocated places. As is the case
with a vote in the House, no Member may enter the Chamber while a division is in
progress in a Committee of the
Whole, [140]
nor will
the Chairman hear a point of order during a
vote. [141]
Those in
favour of the motion to the right of the Chair rise first and after each row has
been counted, the Chair asks the Members in that row to sit. The same procedure
is followed for those in favour to the left of the Chair. The procedure is
repeated for those opposed to the motion. After the count, the Table Officer
stands at the end of the Table and reports the number of “yeas” and
“nays” to the Chairman. The Chairman declares the motion carried or
negatived. [142]
Pairs
are not declared when there is a vote in a Committee of the Whole because no
record is kept of the names of Members who voted one way or the
other. [143]
The Chairman does not vote in a Committee
of the Whole, but in the event of a tie, he or she has a casting vote and is
governed by the same rules as the Speaker under similar
conditions. [144]
The
general principle guiding a Chairman of a Committee of the Whole is to vote in
such a manner as to preserve the matter for further consideration (that is, in
such a way as to maintain the status
quo). [145]