Guidelines for Preparing Government Responses
to Parliamentary Committee Reports
May 2005
Introduction
Government responses to parliamentary committee reports are a key way for the
Government to be held accountable to Parliament. Such responses allow the
Government to address issues raised by parliamentary committees and to outline
its position on policy and program issues. Government responses therefore serve
an important function in our parliamentary system, and require attention by
Ministers and departmental officials.
This document reviews the procedures for departmental officials in preparing
a comprehensive Government response to a committee report, and outlines the key
milestones leading to the tabling of the Government response in Parliament.
Responses to House of Commons Committee Reports
Following recommendations made by the Lefebvre Special Committee in 1982, the
Standing Orders of the House of Commons were amended to permit standing and
special committees to request that the Government table a comprehensive response
to their reports. House of Commons rules had provided the government with 150
days to respond to Committee requests. An amendment to House of Commons Standing
Order 109, effective March 7, 2005, and remaining in effect for the duration of
the current 38th Parliament and the first 60 sitting days of the next
Parliament, reads:
"Within 120 days of the presentation of a report from a standing or
special committee, the government shall, upon the request of the committee,
table a comprehensive response thereto, and when such a response has been
requested, no motion for the concurrence in the report may be proposed until the
comprehensive response has been tabled or the expiration of the said period of
120 days."
Responses to Senate Committee Reports
On June 3, 2003, the Senate adopted the Seventh Report of the Standing
Committee on Rules, Procedures and the Rights of Parliament concerning
Government responses to Senate committee reports within 150 calendar days. The
following has been added to rule 131 of the Rules of the Senate:
"(2) The Senate may request that the Government provide a complete and
detailed response to a report of a select committee, which has been adopted by
the Senate if either the report or the motion adopting the report contains such
a request, or if a motion to that effect is adopted subsequent to the adoption
of a report.
(3) Upon adoption of a report or motion pursuant to subsection (2), the Clerk
shall immediately communicate the request, and send a copy of the report, to the
Government Leader [ie., the Leader of the Government in the Senate] and to each
Minister of the Crown expressly identified in the report or in the motion as a
Minister responsible for responding to the report, and the Government Leader
shall, within one hundred and fifty calendar days after the adoption of the
report or motion, either table the Government’s response or give an
explanation for not doing so in the Senate.
(4)Where the Senate adopts a report or a motion pursuant to subsection (2),
the report of the select committee and the response of the Government or the
explanation of the Government Leader for the absence of a response, or the
absence of such response or explanation, are deemed to be referred to the select
committee one hundred and fifty calendar days after the adoption of the
report."
This Senate rule change provides a formal basis for the Senate to request
Government responses to Senate committee reports.
Definition of Comprehensive Government Response
The Standing Orders of the House of Commons require that the Government table
a comprehensive response, although the precise nature of the response is not
specified. The Speaker of the House has consistently declined to rule on the
issue of the comprehensiveness of responses and has ruled that "the nature
of the response must be left to the discretion of the Government." That
said, it is clearly in the interest of the Government, Parliament and the public
for responses to address fully the issues raised in committee reports.
The requirements in the Senate are similar, in that the Government should
provide a comprehensive response to a committee report, although, as in the
House of Commons, the nature of such a response is left to the discretion of the
Government.
There are several approaches for responding to a standing committee report,
although the first, straight-forward approach is most frequently followed.
- The Government may respond substantively to each recommendation of
a parliamentary committee report, or to groups of related committee
recommendations.
- The Government may make a policy announcement on the same subject
as a parliamentary committee report. This could include legislative or program
initiatives. The letter to the committee chair could indicate that this
announcement, without responding to individual committee recommendations,
constitutes a "global" response to the committee's report. The letter
may also note the main points of the committee report and the general way the
policy announcement addresses these points.
- Where a parliamentary committee is expected to make further
recommendations on the same topic in the near future, the Government may table
an interim response which responds to the issues raised by the Committee.
Departmental Responsibility for Preparation of Response
Departmental officials are responsible for working with Ministers and
Ministers’ offices and the Privy Council Office (PCO) to respond to committee
reports. This includes monitoring parliamentary committee proceedings for
reports requesting a Government response that involves their department.
After a request for a Government response is tabled in the House, or the
Senate adopts a report or separate motion requesting a Government response, PCO
will follow up with a letter to the Deputy Minister of the relevant department
(or departments). In some cases, two or more departments may be asked to prepare
a joint response, although one Minister will usually be identified to coordinate
and table the Government’s response. An officer in a PCO Secretariat will be
designated as a point of contact for the department. The officer will work with
the department to schedule the response for timely discussion by the appropriate
Cabinet Committee, and may provide advice on the nature and content of the
response.
The Legislation and House Planning Secretariat in PCO monitors parliamentary
committee reports that request a comprehensive Government response, and is
available to answer questions about the procedure for preparing and tabling a
Government response. Ministers’ offices may also seek advice from the Offices
of the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons or the Leader of the
Government in the Senate.
Memorandum to Cabinet
Proposals for a comprehensive Government response are prepared under cover of
a Memorandum to Cabinet (MC) for consideration by the appropriate Cabinet
Committee. The MC should outline for Ministers the main features of the proposed
response, and clearly state the degree to which the response addresses the
parliamentary committee's recommendations, including a corresponding rationale.
The proposed Government response is annexed to the MC, and as such, remains a
Cabinet confidence until the response has been tabled. A letter forwarding a
copy of the response to the chair of the parliamentary committee, to be signed
by the appropriate Minister(s), should also be annexed to the MC.
The MC should be ready for Cabinet Committee consideration at least 20 days
before the date required for tabling, in order to permit time for approval by
Cabinet, and tabling. The PCO Cabinet Papers Unit requires that MCs be forwarded
to the Unit no later than 7 days prior to consideration by Cabinet (i.e., 27
days before the 120 day deadline in the House of Commons or the 150 day deadline
in the Senate). Departments should take into consideration the intermittent
scheduling of Cabinet Committee meetings during parliamentary adjournments, as
this may require that the response be scheduled several weeks in advance of the
time lines which are suggested on the following page. Further, if the proposed
response is likely to be controversial, consideration should be given to
scheduling the item for earlier discussion. The proposed Government response, as
ratified by Cabinet, constitutes the document that the Minister should table in
the House of Commons or that the Minister in the Senate, the Leader of the
Government in the Senate, should table in the Senate.
Planning to Meet the Deadline for a Comprehensive Response
In the House of Commons, the start of the 120 calendar day period for
preparing the response begins the day after the committee report is tabled in
the House. The chair of the committee may mention the request in the House when
the committee's report in tabled. As well as being recorded in the Journals of
the House of Commons for that day, the committee’s report is available on the
parliamentary internet site, under Committee Business. The deadline for tabling
a response to a report of a House of Commons committee is not affected by
adjournment or prorogation of Parliament. However, dissolution of Parliament
immediately puts an end to the requirement to respond to committee reports.
The consequences for the Government of missing the deadline are serious
(i.e., this constitutes contempt for the orders of a House of Parliament). In a
ruling dated April 19, 1993, the Speaker of the House of Commons found
a prima facie breach of privilege because an Order in Council and a
Government response were not tabled in the House when they should have been.
In the Senate, the 150 calendar days begins the day the Senate adopts the
report or the motion requesting a Government response, rather than the day the
report is tabled in the Senate. While the deadline for tabling the response is
not affected by adjournment, a prorogation or a dissolution of Parliament
immediately puts an end to the request to respond to Senate committee reports.
However, following a prorogation, the Senate can reinstate its request for a
Government response.
Every attempt should be made to table the response in the Senate by the 150
day deadline. The consequences for the Government for missing the deadline are
outlined in rule 131 of the Rules of the Senate. Rule 131 states that the
Leader of the Government in the Senate "shall, within 150 calendar days
after the adoption of the report or motion either table the Government’s
response or give an explanation for not doing so in the Senate." This
explanation is then referred to the committee that authored the report. In such
cases, departments will prepare the necessary explanation and provide support as
required for the Leader of the Government in the Senate. Should the Leader of
the Government in the Senate fail to provide an explanation, the entire matter
is, according to rule 131, deemed to have been referred to the respective
committee. One possible outcome of this automatic referral would be a
recommendation to the Senate to find the Minister in question in contempt.
The key milestones for preparing a Government response, and suggested time-
lines are as follows.
Milestone |
Timing
(calendar days after tabling of committee report)
House of Commons |
Timing
(calendar days after tabling of committee report)
Senate |
Developmental Stage and Departmental and Ministerial
Approval
of MC and Response * |
1 - 90 days |
1 - 110 days |
Final Signed MC
to PCO * |
7 days before Cabinet Committee Consideration |
7 days before Cabinet Committee Consideration |
Cabinet Committee Consideration |
no later than 100 days |
no later than 130 days |
Cabinet Consideration |
100-120 days |
130-150 days |
Government Response Tabled |
no later than 120 days |
no later than 150 days |
* PCO should be involved in the developmental stage and throughout the MC
process
Procedure for Tabling a Comprehensive Government Response in the House of
Commons
Once the Government's comprehensive response is approved by Cabinet, the
response is tabled in the House of Commons. When the House is sitting, there
are two possible procedures for tabling:
- The response can be directly tabled in the House. Two copies of the
response, in each official language, are tabled by the appropriate Minister, or
Parliamentary Secretary, during Routine Proceedings in the House of Commons,
pursuant to Standing Order 32(2).
- An alternate way is to deposit the response directly with the Clerk of
the House, under cover of a letter signed by the Minister, pursuant to
Standing Order 32(1) without tabling documents during Routine Proceedings. This
process sometimes is referred to as "back door" tabling. In general,
back door tabling is preferred, because this does not require an intervention in
the House.
If the House is not sitting on the due date, the procedure for tabling is
as follows:
- Two copies of the Government's comprehensive response in both official
languages may be deposited directly with the Clerk of the House of Commons on
the Wednesday following the fifteenth day of the month. Every attempt must
be made to deposit the response by the 120 day deadline, as the House may be
recalled at any time, and if the response is with the Clerk, the document will
be deemed to have been tabled "back door" on the day the House resumes
sitting. Where the House stands adjourned and the document is deposited on the
Wednesday following the fifteenth day of the month, it will be recorded in the Journals
of the House of Commons on the day after the specified Wednesday.
- When Parliament is not in session, out of respect for the House, the
Minister should keep the response confidential until it is received in the
Clerk's office. Once deposited with the Clerk, the response may be made public,
but copies should be provided under cover of a letter from the Minister to the
opposition critics informing them the response has been deposited but not yet
recorded in the Journals of the House of Commons, and that it is being
made public immediately.
If Parliament is prorogued on the due date, the response must be tabled
the first day of the new session of Parliament.
Procedure for Tabling a Comprehensive Government Response in the Senate
Once the Government’s comprehensive response is approved by Cabinet, the
response is tabled in the Senate. When the Senate is sitting there are two
possible procedures for tabling:
- The response can be directly tabled in the Senate. Two copies of
the response, in each official language, are tabled by the Leader or the Deputy
Leader of the Government in the Senate during the daily Routine of Business
under the Tabling of Documents.
- An alternate way is to deposit the response directly with the Clerk of
the Senate, under cover of a letter signed by the Leader of the Government
in the Senate, pursuant to rule 28(1) without tabling documents during Routine
Proceedings. In general, back door tabling is preferred, because this does not
require an intervention in the House.
If the Senate is not sitting on the due date, the procedure for tabling
is as follows:
- Two copies of the Government’s comprehensive response in both
official languages may be deposited directly with the Clerk of the Senate on
the due date.
- When Parliament is not sitting, out of respect for the Senate, the
Minister should keep the response confidential until it is received in the Clerk’s
office. Once deposited with the Clerk, the response may be made public, but
copies should be provided under cover of a letter from the Minister to the
opposition critics informing them the response has been deposited but not yet
recorded in the Journals of the Senate, and that it is being made public
immediately.
Distributing the Response
Notwithstanding the method chosen for tabling the Government’s response:
- the response is a Cabinet confidence until it is tabled or
deposited with the Clerk, as noted above;
- out of respect for Parliament, the report should not be made public
before it is tabled;
- the Minister should send the
original letter with the response to the chair of the parliamentary committee
early in the morning of the same day that the response is to be tabled.
Additional copies should be provided for distribution to committee members (the
clerk of the committee can assist with this);
- once the Government’s response is
tabled, officials should ensure equal and timely access to the response for
all Members of Parliament, including MPs, Senators, and parliamentary staff.
Approximately 500 copies of the Government’s response are required. The
Supervisor of Postal and Distribution Services of Parliament will assist
departments in co-ordinating general distribution through Parliament’s
distribution services.
Communications
Depending on the nature of the Government response, communications activities
may be considered following tabling in the Senate or the House of Commons. For
example, departmental communications branches have in the past prepared press
releases, organized media events for the Minister and/or the Parliamentary
Secretary, and briefed Government and opposition caucuses. Again, officials
should ensure that all Members have equal and timely access to these materials
and events.
Conclusion
In the Canadian system of parliamentary government, Ministers are accountable
to Parliament -- collectively and individually -- for the policies, programs and
activities of the Government. Public servants are responsible for supporting
Ministers in the exercise of their Parliamentary duties. The preparation of
these responses therefore should be accorded the necessary priority in order to
ensure that in all cases the Government tables a comprehensive response that
meets the requirements of rule 131 of the Rules of the Senate and
Standing Order 109 of the House of Commons.
For further information you are invited to contact the Legislation and House
Planning Secretariat of the Privy Council Office at 947-3638.
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