Wednesday, December 17, 2025
ADVT 
National

Conservative Majority In Senate Could Give Trudeau Problems In Passing Bills

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:24 PM
  • Conservative Majority In Senate Could Give Trudeau Problems In Passing Bills
OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau's forthcoming legislative agenda could face roadblocks in the Senate, requiring his Liberal government to negotiate concessions with Conservative senators who hold the hammer of the majority in the upper chamber.
 
The Tories hold the most seats in the upper chamber and would be able to use that leverage to slow down legislation, force amendments or push their own private member's bills up higher on the Senate's agenda.
 
That was what the Liberals did when Stephen Harper was first elected in 2006. The Tories were the minority in the upper chamber and had to negotiate with the Liberal majority to get legislation like the Accountability Act passed into law.
 
"We're going to deal with them just like they dealt with us when they were the majority," said one senior Conservative senator, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the caucus had yet to discuss its next steps.
 
Most negotiations, the senator said, will be civil, although Conservatives may not freely give their votes on legislation.
 
"I don't have any responsibility to pass Liberal legislation."
 
A senior Liberal in the Senate likened it to guerilla warfare: the Tories will pick their spots to score political points, but avoid all-out war that could hurt the reputation of the Senate.
 
Another Conservative senator said an acrimonious Senate would only reinforce the popular narrative that the place is packed with partisans who are not interested in critically reviewing legislation, the upper chamber's traditional role of sober second thought.
 
 
There are 22 vacant seats in the Senate; another opens up in February with the impending retirement of Conservative Irving Gerstein, the party's top fundraiser. By the end of 2016, there will be 26 vacant seats as Conservative Michel Rivard and Liberals Celine Hervieux-Payette and David Smith hit the mandatory retirement age of 75.
 
Filling all those seats with Liberal-minded senators would give Trudeau more than half of the 105 seats in the Senate.
 
Trudeau has promised to create an advisory panel that would make recommendations on Senate appointments in a bid to remove some of the partisanship from the upper chamber.
 
Trudeau didn't put a timeline on when that promise would be kept when he was asked about it during a news conference earlier this week.
 
Nor did he say what he would do about getting his government's agenda through the Senate, including having a Liberal point man in the upper chamber.
 
"These are part of the conversations that we'll be having with Senate leadership to ensure that both our government can function well in both Houses, but also that we have the kind of thoughtful non — or less — partisan approach from the Senate that I think Canadians expect," Trudeau said.
 
That has left long-time members of the Senate wondering what will happen next.
 
Usually a change of government means that parties swap government and opposition offices in the Centre Block. This time, everyone is staying put for now: Liberals in the Senate have yet to hear from Trudeau about what role they will play, given they were all turfed from Trudeau's caucus last year.

MORE National ARTICLES

Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous

Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous
According to a new British survey done by smartphone maker HTC, almost everybody lies on their Facebook and Instagram profiles to look good.

Most Friends Post Facebook Pictures To Make You Jealous

Bail Hearing Postponed For Accused Drunk Driver Marco Muzzo In Crash That Killed Four

Bail Hearing Postponed For Accused Drunk Driver Marco Muzzo In Crash That Killed Four
Jennifer Neville-Lake says she is still struggling to process the loss but that she and her husband can now start to move forward.

Bail Hearing Postponed For Accused Drunk Driver Marco Muzzo In Crash That Killed Four

Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier

Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier
The review published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal states that babies at four to six months of age can begin eating these foods.

Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier

Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study

Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study
And while no live births were recorded for women age 44, the mean cost of failed in-vitro fertilization among this age group hit almost $600,000.

Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study

Defence In Guy Turcotte Case To Argue For Verdict Of Not Criminally Responsible

Turcotte has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder but has admitted to causing the 2009 deaths of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.

Defence In Guy Turcotte Case To Argue For Verdict Of Not Criminally Responsible

Hungry Bruin Finds Home Among Branches Of Towering B.C. Pear Tree

Hungry Bruin Finds Home Among Branches Of Towering B.C. Pear Tree
Residents of the Fraser Valley community have alerted conservation officers after spotting the bear high in the branches of a pear tree about 100 kilometres east of Vancouver.

Hungry Bruin Finds Home Among Branches Of Towering B.C. Pear Tree