Selection of Votable Items
Mandate of the Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs
As soon as practicable after the order of
precedence has been established at the beginning of each session, but not later
than 10 sitting days after that date, the Standing Committee on Procedure and
House Affairs must meet to select from the items placed on the order of
precedence as a result of the draw up to 10 items to be designated as
“votable
items”. [93]
Being selected as votable should not be construed as a guarantee that the House
will adopt the bill or motion.
Certain items which may be selected as
votable are nonetheless not to be included as part of the list of 10 votable
items, since they were not placed on the order of precedence as a result of the
draw:
- bills jointly supported by 100 Members; [94]
- Senate public bills;
- bills reinstated from a previous session at the second reading stage.
As well, any item on which a recorded
division has been deferred, and which would be removed from the order of
precedence as a result of that division, is not to be included as part of the
list of 10 votable items.
Furthermore, other items are automatically
placed on the order of precedence and automatically made votable but are not to
be included as part of the list of 10 votable items:
- all stages of a private bill; [95]
- notices of motions (papers); [96]
- bills reported from committee (or deemed to have been reported from committee);
- bills at the third reading stage;
- consideration of Senate amendments to bills.
Consultation with Members
It has been the practice since 1986 for the
Committee to consult with the sponsors of each bill or motion placed on the
order of precedence before making its selection of votable items. Each Member
sponsoring an item on the order of precedence is invited to appear before the
Committee in a public meeting to make a short presentation explaining why his or
her item warrants additional debate and being put to a vote in the House. Each
presentation may be followed by a brief question-and-answer period. The
Committee has traditionally selected votable items by consensus rather than on
the basis of
votes. [97]
A Member may ask the Committee not to
select his or her item as votable by notifying the clerk of the Committee. The
item will still remain on the order of precedence and be debated as a
non-votable item.
Criteria for Selection
Since 1986, the Committee has based its
selection of votable items on specific criteria, the list of which was
occasionally modified throughout the
years. [98]
The most
recent list, outlined in the Seventieth Report of the Standing Committee on
Procedure and House Affairs in April
1999, [99]
contains the
following criteria:
- Bills and motions must be drafted in clear, complete, and effective terms;
- Bills and motions must be constitutional and concern areas of federal jurisdiction;
- Bills and motions should concern matters of significant public interest;
- Bills and motions should concern
issues that are not part of the government’s current legislative agenda
and which have not been voted on or otherwise addressed by the House of Commons
in the current session of Parliament;
- All other things being equal,
higher priority will be given to items which transcend purely local interest,
are not couched in partisan terms, or cannot be addressed by the House in other
ways.
Presentation of Report
After consulting the Members sponsoring the
items on the order of precedence, the Committee meets, in camera, to make
a final decision. It prepares a report which contains the list of the items
selected and the names of the sponsoring Members. Once presented to the House,
the report is deemed adopted without debate or
amendment. [100]
Further Selection of Votable Items
Further meetings to select items may be
held from time to time during the session, usually when the order of precedence
has been replenished through subsequent draws. The number of votable items which
the Committee can select after a draw will depend on the number of items still
on the list from previous selections, although no more than 10 items selected as
votable can be on the order of precedence at any given
time. [101]