Canada Post: All Night NDP Filibuster Stalls Back To Work Bill To End Lockout

Jack Layton

First Posted: 06/24/11 07:02 AM ET Updated: 08/24/11 06:12 AM ET

THE CANADIAN PRESS -- OTTAWA - Were it not for the bags forming under people's eyes, it felt just like a regular day in the House of Commons.

But hours after most MPs believed they'd be on a plane heading off on summer vacations, they sat in Parliament, debating legislation that would end the lockout for thousands of Canadian postal workers.

The bill was introduced on Monday after Canada Post locked out its employees following a series of rotating strikes that began on June 3.

All parties hoped it would spur the two sides to reach a deal on their own, and the New Democrats had vowed to stretch out debate in order to buy them more time.

But talks between Canada Post and the union collapsed late Wednesday night.

The Tories said the bill must pass to avoid prolonged economic fallout. Since Thursday was the last scheduled sitting day for the House of Commons, they could not adjourn until the bill was dispatched to the Senate.

And so, vowed Labour Minister Lisa Raitt: "we will sit here as long as we need to sit here."

The NDP switched tactics, focusing their ire instead on the substance of the legislation instead. They oppose provisions that set wages and stringent arbitration guidelines.

The debate on the bill had begun early Thursday morning on procedural matters and as it stretched beyond sunset, storm clouds gathered over the Peace Tower.

Thunder rumbled and lightening flashed, perhaps a sign of the heated debate to come.

While blocks away a community barbecue festival was in full swing, inside the Parliament buildings, MPs were organizing their own dinner plans.

"Second reading of the bill to provide for the resumption of postal services begins," wrote Tory MP Peter Braid on Twitter.

"My House Duty shift is 9 p.m. to midnight. Pizza night."

What most Canadians think of when they catch a glimpse of parliament in action is the raucous jousting of the daily question period, when the green-felt seats are full and the air is crackling with debate.

Thursday evening, it had exactly that air. Every seat was full. Even the Prime Minister was in his seat for the vote setting the rules under which this debate would take place. "Union Jack" came the cry from the Tories as Opposition Leader Jack Layton got up to say his piece.

Up in the galleries sat members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, facing the New Democrats who were prepared to spend hours more championing their rights.

Members of the public trickled in and out of the seats devoted to them and pages wandered on and off the floor, bringing glasses of water with lemons or ice. Their time in the Commons was supposed to be up on Thursday as well, but now it was uncertain when they'd get to go home.

But once the Tories had spoken to their bill, most of them streamed out of the House.

Layton rose to his feet to give his response to the bill backed by all of his caucus colleagues.

Not a BlackBerry was thumbed as they listened in rapture to their leader, rising more than a half dozen times for standing ovations as he took his fellow politicians through a history of the NDP movement, unions, and their contribution to society.

A promise that the NDP would be introducing amendments to the bill set the rumour mill whirring - would there be a deal between the parties?

"I and our team will be available, regardless of the hour of debate, to talk about the possibility of a solution," Layton said.

But it was not to be. Forty minutes into his address, he moved a procedural motion only, to delay debate on the bill for another six months.

Speaker of the House Andrew Scheer gave up on game of chess he was playing on his iPad, and ceded his chair to a deputy as the MPs began debating that motion.

It was going to be a very long night.

Even into the wee hours of Friday morning, the calendar in the House of Commons still read Thursday, June 23.

It wasn't the fault of a clerk asleep at the desk _ the intricacies of parliamentary procedure meant the day debate began was the day it would remain inside parliament until a vote on the bill takes place.

MPs had raged earlier this week that an extended sitting would force them to work June 24, which is St-Jean-Baptiste Day, a holiday in Quebec that has the status of a national holiday. But according to the Commons calendar, that day may never come.

Over the course of the night, Harper made several appearances in the Commons, once standing at the back row and once sitting in front, flanked by ministers as his official photographer snapped memento shots nearby.

Even as debate was derailed by points of order and secondary motions, NDP MPs lost none of their fire. There was also little of the off-topic tangents that often characterize the types of political manoeuvres, known as the filibuster.

"This is an action that profoundly hurts 50,000 families across the country," B.C.'s Peter Julian raged against the bill.

But both sides struggled to make the extended debate relevant outside the political bubble. They continually invoked emails, texts and calls they were receiving from their constituents purportedly stating their interest in the issue.

"There are millions of working people in Canada who want to see back-to-work legislation," said Saskatchewan Tory Tom Lukiwski.

By 1:40 a.m. Friday, there was one person left in the public gallery.

As their colleagues rose and sat to make their points, many MPs appeared to be trying to keep busy at their desk. Some read through files or tapped away on laptops.

At any given time, there were about three dozen MPs in the house, split between majority Tories and opposition. But the rest weren't far away.

Laughter from the lobbies kept wafting into the cool air of the Commons as the MPs wiled away the night, waiting for the vote.

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THE CANADIAN PRESS -- OTTAWA - Were it not for the bags forming under people's eyes, it felt just like a regular day in the House of Commons. But hours after most MPs believed they'd be on a plane ...
THE CANADIAN PRESS -- OTTAWA - Were it not for the bags forming under people's eyes, it felt just like a regular day in the House of Commons. But hours after most MPs believed they'd be on a plane ...
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05:01 PM on 06/24/2011
Okay, I'll admit it. The only reason I am so bitter towards Canadians is because my wife left me for a Hockey player from Thunder Bay. She said that he was "number 17 on da hice but number one in her heart."

I'll try to behave myself.

Now show me some love and fan me.
Sorry.
05:08 PM on 06/24/2011
Only a childish, immature, robot would try to impersonate someone.

Grow up. You remind me of the spoiled brat in school who would throw things when he/she didn't get their way.
05:09 PM on 06/24/2011
I take it as a compliment when you go to such foolish extremes for no other reason than to just do so.

Grow up please.
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ethrop
micro-bio-tic
01:07 PM on 06/24/2011
How to deal with Little Tomas.

Little Tomas is old, cranky and, in his own special way, very entertaining. His anger runs deep and he is about as sophisticated as a gnat. However, he DOES have a right to plaster his, erm, "intellect" on here as much as anyone and we know how much he is taking advantage of it. The problem with Little Tomas is that he cannot be engaged, meaning he is passed the stage of teachability. He is the equivalent of the schoolyard kid with fingers in his ears. There is no likelihood of an intelligent conservation developing with Little Tomas.. So ignoring the little fella is likely the wisest policy with the occasional jib.

These guys are quite common in the US HufPost. Some of them are paid by the post.
01:13 PM on 06/24/2011
Kisses to you and fanned!
01:21 PM on 06/24/2011
Little Tomas is middle aged, hard working and an individual. HE can get by just fine without being told that a shower is cheaper at night. I pay my taxes, I expect politicians to live under the same rule of law I do. This has nothing to with left-right. All Canadian politicians are Corrupt.

None are in jail. It's quite obvious that a certain segment in society is Above the Law.

Now, you can keep up the personal attacks, but when you try to tell me Progressives are more tolerant than Libertarians, I can only point to your ridiculous post as evidence to the contrary.
01:18 PM on 06/24/2011
And that's about it in a nut shell. Sad.
f/f
12:40 PM on 06/24/2011
Finally the federal NDP'ers get to flex their newfound muscles. If they're lucky, when the debate is finally over, their leader will take them all to the local whorehouse for a rubdown!
12:59 PM on 06/24/2011
Layton is known for visiting those places and getting the special treatment after.

If your husband, wife, brother, cousin, or anyone else you know got caught using a sex worker, how would you feel?

Layton becomes a millionaire.

Is there any shame in Canadian politics? Canadian pundits, all 15 of them, love juicy American scandals.

But they fail to dig up any on their friends in the government.The Canadian media are propaganda arms for the government.

When will the average Canadian start fighting this garbage and take our country back?
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GreenCanadian
is mixing the new record
12:05 PM on 06/24/2011
http://markcrispinmiller.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/03/craigslist_astroturf.png

Here's the reason that Tom Jeff is so busy here making up talking points like his taxes paying for Canada Post.
12:39 PM on 06/24/2011
The two are not related. I have the right to voice my opinion, even if it hurts your feelings.

I can't stand the Conservative Party in Canada.

They are supposed to give me more rights, not take more away.
12:48 PM on 06/24/2011
I can't stand them either but the lot down south is hardly doing much better.

Maybe Franz Josef Land?
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
01:03 PM on 06/24/2011
One of the most expensive components of the Canada Post operation is the disbursement of the pension benefits for retired postal workers. This is not part of the day to day Canada Post accounting.

Postal workers become eligible for full indexed pensions at age 55. The payouts are much higher than what ordinary Canadians get from the CPP. And Canadian taxpayers have the responsibility to cover whatever shortfall isn`t obtained by pension fund investments.
11:33 AM on 06/24/2011
Oh, THomas Jefferson, oh, THomas Jefferson, please be so kind as to forgive those who are impostors of ye! For ye hath brought us the best and most of quotes and wisdoms...none of which tomasjefferson could come ever near!
12:01 PM on 06/24/2011
Who is the CanadianCzech Chick?

At least you know how I think.
12:23 PM on 06/24/2011
Oh flatter yourself away, baby
11:27 AM on 06/24/2011
Waste of time . Layton will not win this one, he does not have the coconuts to stand to his union buddies. What a totally wastful exercise in grandstanding.
11:31 AM on 06/24/2011
How can Layton win? Harper has a majority so Layton should go to Vietnam for the next 4 years.
11:36 AM on 06/24/2011
Layton would not be missed but poor Vietnam.
11:38 AM on 06/24/2011
OOh! You are building up fans! Up to 3 now! Way to go,man!
12:02 PM on 06/24/2011
His coconuts are still at the bawdy house.
11:21 AM on 06/24/2011
To change the topic a little - how relevant is Canada Post today?

- Almost everyone has email.
- Billing happens online
- Alternative carriers for parcels/packages (UPS, FedEx, etc)

I think it's time that CP went through a major restructuring. Depending on the issue, I usually side with the employees (I like the working person's viewpoint). But I'm not sure that CP is worth saving because it is so antiquated. Is there something I may be missing?
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Cynthia Dudley
11:24 AM on 06/24/2011
Alternate carriers aren't required to cover the whole country at the rates that CP does.
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
11:44 AM on 06/24/2011
Right. email does it quicker and cheaper.
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GreenCanadian
is mixing the new record
11:26 AM on 06/24/2011
Shopping online has insured that mail volumes have not declined. It may be antiquated, but it still delivers the modern shoppers goods.
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
11:20 AM on 06/24/2011
Let`s be clear about what Layton wants with his filibuster.

Layton wants Harper to give the union the same wage settlement in the last offer by Canada Post management.

Hmmm. Or could it be Layton`s trying to gain favour with organized labour?
11:28 AM on 06/24/2011
Who cares what Bawdy House Layton wants?

Harper has a majority. Why does the name Jack Layton even make an article.

The guy has no power.
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
11:53 AM on 06/24/2011
That was my point. The whole charade is just is just Layton trying make himself look to the unions because some of them came out in favour of the Liberals in the last election.
03:31 PM on 06/24/2011
60% of the people who did not vote for Harper last election care what Jack Layton and the other opposition parties want. Is he supposed to just roll over and play dead because Stephen Harper has his majority government?
11:11 AM on 06/24/2011
Postal workers only get upto 7 weeks holiday, full INDEXED pension at 55 and 35 sick days. My friend she gets 7 sick occurances a year, and do not need a doctor note for 5 or less days, so they all take 5 days each time they call in sick. 5x7= 35 sick days, pretty good if you can get it.
Oh yes, great benefits too, dental, glasses, prescrition etc etc etc
Why get a university degree when you can drop out of highschool and make more!
11:13 AM on 06/24/2011
Exactly, lets all live off the dole. Why work when you can work for the government.
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Cynthia Dudley
11:15 AM on 06/24/2011
And yet the corporation still makes a profit while guaranteeing services across the second largest country in the world. Maybe we need more postal workers to make up for all the people getting their wages cut so that CEOs can make 1000% more than their contract labour.
11:17 AM on 06/24/2011
If it wasn't for CEO's you wouldn't have a job because after all, you have never created one.
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
11:41 AM on 06/24/2011
The books are currently balancing year to year because Canada Post got into the business of distributing flyers. If it wasn`t for the junk mail we all hate, Canada Post would be losing money.

And of course, benefits like pensions aren`t part of the day to day accounting. They go straight on the taxpayers.
11:08 AM on 06/24/2011
Just watching the HOC broadcast, not too many people there, same old same old arguments I was hearing last night.
Good opp for all the new MP's to learn some public speaking skills and for their friends and relatives to tape them on TV I guess.
I get a kick out of some of the French speakers who can be quite animated, yet the translaters speak in almost a monatone, hard to get the full impact, sure same for the english speakers translated into French
11:06 AM on 06/24/2011
There's this pitting of public vs private sector workers these days that I just don't understand. What is the victory in dragging working class people down to your pay grade?? Instead of being upset at the corporations who look to calmly screw their workers at every turn, we blame the public sector workers??
Unions are not out of control - lack of solidarity is. If you're not advocating a reduction in public worker's compensation, how do you propose private workers meet public sector union wages/benefits/pensions in the middle?
And by the way. TAXES DO NOT pay for Canada Post. Stamps do. They are a crown corporation designed to be self-sustaining (and not necessarily profit-making like most corporations).
What a sorrowful state of affairs when we have to view simply being employed as a blessing. What's the conclusion of this kind of thinking? We will all suffer at minimum wage so long as we race to the bottom like this. We gain nothing from thwarting people's attempts to bargain for a better life, except maybe the smug satisfaction that we might eventually make more than them.
It's either collective bargaining or private begging. Good luck with the latter.
BritishColumbian
American/Canadian liberal
11:08 AM on 06/24/2011
Excellent post. Fan'd and fav'd.
11:14 AM on 06/24/2011
Actually my taxes pay their wages and pension seeing how they're in debt.

Are you for real?

You must live on the dole.
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GreenCanadian
is mixing the new record
11:47 AM on 06/24/2011
For the last 16 years the CPC has earned a 9 figure profit anually. Are you getting paid to make this up?
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GreenCanadian
is mixing the new record
11:53 AM on 06/24/2011
Canada Post makes a 9 figure profit annually and has done so for the last 16 years. Try reading something relevant to the topic you are discussing and you won't be so wrong so frequently.
11:05 AM on 06/24/2011
Well I guess it's just as well to go ahead and eliminate any possibility that I would ever vote for the NDP. The postal workers should be fired. If they destroy or misdirect mail then they should be charged and jailed. And last but certainly not least Jack Layton should resign.
11:14 AM on 06/24/2011
Why was the possibility ever even there?
11:00 AM on 06/24/2011
At some point a balance between reality and what's reasonable should prevail in these collective bargaining negotiations. I'm all for fair wage and labour equality, but a line has to be drawn when average consumers and small business owners are getting caught in the cross-fire.

We're all hard-working Canadians, and some of us aren't as lucky as those in the public sector who enjoy guaranteed wage increase on a regular basis and security of tenure. Good for them. I don't enjoy any of that working in the private sector, but it's fine. But please, don't make me suffer the consequences if the union and Canada Post are not able to meet half way. I have nothing to do with it, and yet, I am somehow caught in the middle and experiencing the repercussions. How is that fair?
11:08 AM on 06/24/2011
"I don't enjoy any of that working in the private sector, but it's fine."

So you're fine with paying people a salary and wage which you could only dream of?

Government workers don't work. There is no pressure. How many teachers or police get fired in Ontario every year. None.

The system is so corrupt that we need an overhaul.
12:23 PM on 06/24/2011
Don't worry, once the public sector has driven this economy into Greece territory, we'll have to do something about it.
10:56 AM on 06/24/2011
What would Jack Layton do if the media in Canada was like the media in the USA?

Why no scandals in Canada?
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Cynthia Dudley
10:58 AM on 06/24/2011
We aren't that prurient- it is a cultural thing.
11:09 AM on 06/24/2011
What's that mean? People can live off the dole no matter what they do?
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
12:36 PM on 06/24/2011
I agree. Sitting politicians and ho`s don`t mix. For some reason the media didn`t want to touch a question of credibility, in a situation where Layton was obviously lying, in the middle of an election campaign. Shame on the Canadian media.
01:09 PM on 06/24/2011
The Canadian media and the Politicians all hang out together, They're friends.

Friends don't want to take friends down.

The corruption is so obvious it's sickening.
TonyOnly
What is said is more important than who says it.
09:54 AM on 06/24/2011
Just in case anyone didn`t know this, Canadian postal workers already have the right to retire with full pension at age 55.

And a sweetheart pension it is. And who picks up the bulk of the tab? Canadian taxpayers, of course.
10:06 AM on 06/24/2011
That;s right Tony. Not to mention the Police, Fire and Educators that are getting FAT RAISES while the private sector grinds to a halt.

What kind of system rewards a FAT PENSION to government Unions, all the while the taxpayers themselves get NADA?

I pay your Pension and Salary and all I receive in return is HIGHER Taxes to pay for those salaries and wages.

Police in Ontario make more than in Detroit, or Chicago or Miami. And they hardly ever get killed. Why so much money when the danger isn't their like in American cities?

Teachers, Police, Fire, Government Bureaucrats and all others living on the dole need a little dose of reality.
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CHMB
What's long and brown and sticky? A Stick.
10:48 AM on 06/24/2011
Are you suggesting that fire fighters who RUN INTO BURNING BUILDINGS don't deserve their pension?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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viennawoods
Proud to be a Canadian Liberal!!
04:02 PM on 06/24/2011
Teachers are collecting dole? Money for no work? Try my job for a day, buddy. You'll be sorry you did.
10:12 AM on 06/24/2011
Educators,Police, Fire, all other government workers raping us taxpayers.

When will it end?
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Cynthia Dudley
10:28 AM on 06/24/2011
You are aware that a negotiated contract is not even vaguely related to a violent sexual crime?
11:21 AM on 06/24/2011
Hard to say, likely never end,
Strong unions, unlimited pockets(more or less), no competition(or alternative) and Politicians who want votes.

There is really no counterweight or balance.