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Interest Groups, Representation and Conflict Management in the Standing Committees of the House of Commons*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2009

Grace Skogstad
Affiliation:
Carleton University

Abstract

Proposals to strengthen regional representation in national institutions are premised on the assumption that representation of (regional) interests and accommodation of conflicts between competing interests are compatible roles, and most likely when national decision makers represent all contending interests. The article argues that the two roles are not necessarily compatible. The behaviour of MPs on the agriculture and transport committees in debating three bills during the 32nd Parliament shows considerable efforts at representation but much less at conflict management. The emergence of specialist interest groups promotes representational efforts by MPs but often at the expense of conflict management. Other factors affecting the joint occurrence of interest representation and interest accommodation include the individual and collective characteristics of members, their partisan incentives, and the diversity of the goals of their client groups.

Résumé

Les propositions visant à renforcer la représentation régionale dans les institutions fédérales découlent de l'hypothése que la représentation des intérêts (régionaux) et la résolution des conflits entre intérêts divergents sont des rôles compatibles et plus probables quand les autorités politiques fédérales représent tous les intérêts en cause. Cet article tend à démontrer que ces deux rôles ne sont pas nécessairement compatibles. Le comportement des députés sur le comité de l'Agriculture et celui des Transports au cours du débat de trois projets de lois pendant le 32e Parlement démontre que des efforts beaucoup plus considérables ont été mis sur la représentation que sur la résolution des conflits. L'émergence des groupes d'intérêt spécialisés conduit les députés a privilégier l'aspect « représentation » au détriment de la résolution des conflits. Parmi les autres facteurs qui influencent les rapports entre la représentation et la résolution des conflits, on remarque les traits individuels et collectifs des députés, leur motivations partisanes et la diversité des objectifs de leurs clientèles.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association (l'Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique 1985

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References

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35 The CCA existed as early as 1932 (when it was called the Council of Canadian Beef Producers), but grew in the 1970s as a result of a check-off system whereby it received a fixed sum of money from each cattle sale.

36 This description of the various groups' beliefs draws upon a weekly reading of The Western Producer; Wilson, Barry, Beyond the Harvest (Saskatoon: Western Producer Prairie Books, 1981), 245Google Scholar; Mitchell, Don, The Politics of Food (Toronto: James Lorimer, 1975), 18 and chap. 5Google Scholar; and the Canadian Cattlemen's Association, Policy Directions for the Canadian Beef Producer (1977).

37 Their lobby in 1970–1971 to secure exemption from the Farm Products Marketing Agencies Act, was highly successful. See Skogstad, Grace, “The Farm Products Marketing Agencies Act,” Canadian Public Policy 6 (1980), 89100.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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39 An urban-rural riding is one with an approximately equal number of rural and urban polls.

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45 This and subsequent information about members' descriptions of their links to agricultural groups and the importance of agricultural concerns to them was obtained by interviews and questionnaires in February-March, 1983.

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48 The full title is “An Act to Regulate the Importation into Canada of Fresh, Chilled and Frozen Meat and to Amend the Export and Import Permits Act.”

49 Conservative MP Charles Mayer: “I know the present bill is basically the same as we would have brought forward had we remained the government” (Minutes, Standing Committee on Agriculture, November 5, 1981, 45:19).

50 Ibid., June 17, 1982, 38:8–9, and November 5, 1981, 45:9 when Eugene Whelan acknowledged that the formula change was the same as the CCA had proposed.

51 To illustrate, PC member Bert Hargrave invited the CCA to delineate the dangers of interfering with the North American continental flow of live beef, while the NDP members queried whether the Meat Import Act was only a stop-gap measure that fell short of the appropriate remedy to ensure beef producers an adequate return—a national meat marketing agency (Minutes, Standing Committee on Agriculture, June 16, 1981; June 23, 1981).

52 Ibid., June 16, 1981, 40:22–24. On November 5. 1981, Conservative member Mayer argued that there was “no more democratic body” than the CCA (45:20).

53 Ibid., June 16, 1981,45:17.

54 Ibid., June 10, 1982. 81:28–29 (Eugene Whelan).

55 The full title is “An Act to Establish a Corporation called Canagrex to Promote. Facilitate and Engage in the Export of Agricultural and Food Products from Canada.”

56 Whelan, Eugene (Minutes, Standing Committee on Agriculture, June 10, 1982, 81:24)Google Scholar lists the groups for and against the bill. See also the editorial, “Foes of Canagrex,” Globe and Mail (Toronto), January 26, 1983, 6.Google Scholar

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59 In its June 1, 1982, presentation, the Consumers Association of Canada talked about “excessive government intervention” and claimed Canagrex “contravenes a competitive market place” (76:5). See also Wilson, Barry, “Canagrex Still a Hot Potato,” The Western Producer, November 25, 1982, 1.Google Scholar

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63 See especially Liberal MP M. Dubois, ibid., April 29, 1982, 63:23.

64 Gordon Taylor, ibid., June 29, 1982, 84:44–45. As late as January 1983, two CFA affiliates, the Manitoba Farm Bureau and Alberta Unifarm, broke with the CFA to oppose Canagrex. See Wilson, Barry, “Canagrex touchy CFA issue,” The Western Producer, February 3, 1983.Google Scholar

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66 The NDP pointed to the fact that membership in the CCA is not necessarily vol untary in either Alberta or British Columbia. Alberta cattlemen belong “because they pay a check-off and BC cattlemen because membership is required in order for eligibility in BC's commodity stabilization scheme (Gary Jones, President of the Canadian Cattlemen's Association, ibid., 69:51).

67 Ibid., May 20, 1982, 70:43 (Conservative MP, Stan Korchinski).

68 A story in the Globe and Mail (January 26, 1983, 6) spoke of massive producer opposition to Canagrex. This erroneous impression washrpart created by the political nature of the selection of witnesses invited to appear: the result was that the number of groups opposing Canagrex rivalled and perhaps.exceeded the number supporting it. In actual fact, the number of producers supporting Canagrex probably exceeded those opposing it.

69 Minutes, Standing Committee on Agriculture, June 23, 1982, 83:10–11.

70 Ibid., July 8, 1982, 87:41 (Conservative MP Art Malone).

71 Ibid., April 29, 1982, 63:10–12. Conservative MP Doug Neil questioned the Canadian Pork Council along similar lines on May 18, 1982, 69:12.

72 Ibid., June 23, 1982, 83:14 and June 29, 1982, 84:82, respectively.

73 House of Commons, Debates, December 11, 1981, 13972–73.

74 Appearing before the transport committee, Minister of Transport Jean-Luc Pepin told Conservative Bert Hargrave that those working on payments to producers would “have to find a solution, an option, that would be acceptable to the pools and would be acceptable also to the Quebec farm organizations” (Minnies, Standing Committee on Transport, June 29, 1983, 104:34).

75 During the three days of hearings in Regina, 72 groups presented briefs. During the two-day hearing in Edmonton (August 2–3), the transport committee heard from the government of Alberta, 21 groups and 8 individuals; in Vancouver (August 12), from the deputy minister of transport and 18 predominantly business and transportation groups; in Winnipeg (August 4–5), from the government of Manitoba, 31 individuals, and 24 groups. Several other organizations, including Canadian National Railways and Canadian Pacific Limited, appeared before the committee in Ottawa. The October 31 issue of the Standing Committee on Transport Proceedings contains the written submissions of 54 individuals and the November 3 issue contains 24 submissions of provincial government departments and organizations.

76 See, for example, Minnies, Standing Committee on Transport, August 10, 1983, 115:102.

77 Ibid., August 10, 1983, 115:98.

78 House of Commons, Debates, June 21, 1983, 2638.

79 Franks, C. E. S., “The Dilemma of the Standing Committee of the Canadian House of Commons,” this JOURNAL 4 (1971), 471.Google Scholar An alternative perspective, 14 years after Franks's prediction, is that of Pross, A. Paul (“Parliamentary Influence and the Diffusion of Power,” 263)Google Scholar, which suggests that groups' focus on parliament has enhanced the latter”s role in the policy process. The findings reported here are consistent with Pross's claim.

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