House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota announced his intention to resign yesterday, the effective date to be the end of sitting today, with the added caveat that he won’t preside over any further debates in the meantime (which is just as well considering how much of a hash that was on Monday). The timing of what comes next was somewhat up in the air—it would have sounded like the initial plan was for the election for Rota’s replacement would be on Thursday, but because that voting needs to be done in-person (it’s a secret ranked ballot—MPs can’t use their voting app for that), there were concerns about MPs who weren’t in town this week, and so on. That meant that the vote would have to be on Tuesday (because the Commons isn’t sitting on Monday), leaving two more days with no Speaker, and under the Constitution, they could not sit until they had a new one.
Good grief, put down your notes. Speak. https://t.co/ISBUMs7YNR
— Andrew Leach (@andrew_leach) September 26, 2023
Speaker’s office: “I can confirm the food from the Garden Party is going to The Ottawa Mission.” https://t.co/My3pmcz7Da
— Rachel Aiello (@rachaiello) September 26, 2023
It was at this point that the House Leaders came up with a creative solution, that may be dubiously constitutional—they passed a motion by unanimous consent that declared that the Dean of the House, Bloc MP Louis Plamondon, is to be “deemed elected” and will act as interim Speaker until the election on Tuesday. Which is…interesting. I’m not sure why they wouldn’t just swallow the loss of two sitting days (which could be a blessed relief considering how overheated things are right now over this whole debacle). There is also the question of Rota’s status once he has given up the office, and whether the Liberal caucus will want him back in their ranks considering what has happened, and the fact that the Conservatives would love nothing more than to call them all “Nazi sympathizers” or some other such epithet as a result. I’ve heard that Rota told a local radio station that he didn’t plan to run again in the next election, so perhaps he may need to consider getting an earlier start to those retirement plans.
An interesting precedent developing where normally the only role for the MP with the longest continuous record of service, as Dean of the House is to preside over the election of the Speaker at the opening of the first session of Parliament. https://t.co/mERTjadDiV
— Lyle Skinner (@SkinnerLyle) September 27, 2023
The key phrase of the motion re Plamondon as Speaker is "deemed elected" as that satisfies the constitutional requirement that a Speaker be elected with "all practicable Speed" per s.45 of the Constitution Act, 1867 #cdnlaw #cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/lS1q7TmtHM
— Lyle Skinner (@SkinnerLyle) September 27, 2023
Meanwhile, the Conservatives are now pushing for some kind of committee study to “get to the bottom of what happened,” which is ridiculous because we know what happened—Rota didn’t do his job to politically vet his guest in the gallery. The notion that PMO should have vetted him is outrageous because it’s an assault on parliamentary sovereignty and the independence of the Speaker. It’s also little more than an attempt to set up yet another partisan circus where they can perform for the cameras, and gather a bunch more clips for future shitposts, because that’s what this parliament has become—little more than a clip factory. There’s nothing to study. We know what happened, and the fact that the Conservatives are deliberately conflating security screenings and political vetting is being done solely to score points, and they all know it. Hopefully the other opposition parties are smart enough not to fall for this (but I suspect they won’t be, because he have no serious MPs left).
Anthony Rota, sulking from his resignation, retweets words of support from a former Conservative MP pushed out because of his racism.
Judgment! pic.twitter.com/WIf9DNqAWd— Dale Smith (@journo_dale) September 27, 2023
https://twitter.com/dgardner/status/1706822083127234564
Ukraine Dispatch:
Russian drone strikes against Odessa have not only damaged warehouses, but also have suspended service of a ferry that runs between Ukraine and Romania. Ukrainian forces are claiming success around villages near Bakhmut. Russian state television claimed to show a video conference attended by that the Black Sea fleet commander that the Ukrainians say they killed.
Overnight, russian terrorists attacked Mykolaiv, Kirovohrad, Cherkasy and Odesa regions with 38 Shahed drones. 26 of them were shot down. Infrastructure objects in Cherkasy and Odesa regions were damaged. The drones also hit Orlivka-Isakcea ferry crossing. Two people were… pic.twitter.com/snwtr0dHFR
— Defense of Ukraine (@DefenceU) September 26, 2023
https://twitter.com/kyivindependent/status/1706716260627616064