Liberals want to stop overnight voting with ‘health breaks’ for MPs
The Liberal government wants to impose “health breaks” to eliminate overnight voting in the House of Commons and to combat what they say is Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre’s personal agenda to “obstruct and create chaos.”
Government House leader Steve MacKinnon introduced the motion Monday, with the New Democrats voicing their immediate support for it.
It would address the “obstruction” of the Opposition Conservatives for the remainder of the current parliamentary session, and discourage such tactics in the future, MacKinnon said.
He billed the motion’s main objective as allowing the House to do its work, provide extensive time to debate bills and ultimately to turn the House of Commons into a healthy work space.
Conservative House leader Andrew Scheer promptly dismissed the motion as an effort to cover up “failures” by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Bloc Québécois MPs also described it as an “admission of failure.”
But MacKinnon insisted it’s a workplace health and safety issue, saying no one’s job should require them to stay awake for 30 straight hours.
That’s how long a Conservative-led voting marathon on spending measures lasted in December. Many MPs stayed awake by reading books, eating fast food, streaming shows on their tablets or scrolling on Instagram and YouTube.
“It’s not healthy for anyone. No nurse, no doctor, no concierge, no anyone in this country should be subjected to that kind of thing,” MacKinnon said.
“No workplace would ever tolerate that kind of behaviour, least of all one that is voting for billions of dollars of supports for Canadians.”
The motion, if it passes, would make it so that under similar circumstances, the House would sit until midnight and resume the following morning to allow for some rest