Independent senators want rule changes to prevent partisan stalling on bills
OTTAWA — The largest group of independents in the Senate wants some rule changes to reflect the new reality of a less partisan chamber of sober second thought — and to rein in obstruction tactics by Conservative senators, who make up the last remaining unabashedly partisan caucus in the upper house.
But the Independent Senators Group will first have to find a way to prevent the Conservatives from blocking attempts to change the rules.
The group wants to reform the rules “so that we can reduce the amount of dilatory practices, waste of time and gamesmanship, partisan gamesmanship, that has slowed down and which has obstructed the work of the Senate,” its leader Sen. Yuen Pau Woo said Thursday at the end of a three-day retreat with his fellow group members.
He recalled “vividly” one day in which the Senate was still on the first item of business on the order paper at 11 p.m., after seven hours of procedural manoeuvring by the Conservatives that resulted in repeated bell ringing for votes on motions to adjourn.