Neill McKay said:
As soon as the position becomes elected it will be politicized. One of the essential virtues of constitutional monarchy is that the Queen doesn't owe anyone any favours, is immune to political pressure, and is above the divisiveness of politics. The minute you start choosing the person for the office, which really means electing him or her at some level, then you've got yourself another politician. And we have plenty of those already.
...
Is the German president overly political? How about the Indian president or the Israeli president? There are several Westminster style parliamentary republics, with
selected presidents. I refuse to accept that Canadians are so venal as to be unable to manage.
If you think my (or McWhinney's, take your pick) proposal for
morphing into a regency is scary, here is my proposal for Senate Reform, by stealth.
On being appointed, Prime Minister Harper writes a few letters:
"¢ First, to each provincial premier outlining (not
proposing) his plan for Senate Reform;
"¢ Second, to each senator -
o Outlining his proposal, and
o Demanding each senator's resignation, to be effective the day of the next general election in the province (s)he represents.
Next: the proposal; on the same day as he sent the letters, he goes public and tells Canadians that, starting soon, they will elect their senators when they elect their provincial governments. He will explain that senators will be elected, province by province, using a simple system of proportional representation: each provincial party will submit lists of candidates for the Senate of Canada when they go to the polls in their respective provinces; senators will be
appointed, by the Prime Minister of Canada - as required by the Constitution, from those lists, based on the share of the popular vote earned by each party; senators will, before being
appointed, provide the Prime Minster with a letter of resignation, effective at the next provincial general election (this will be a new, practical, requirement for being appointed to the Senate). He will explain that, almost certainly, a few senators will refuse to resign, preferring that they be allowed to continue in their illegitimate, appointed,
pork barrel politics, patronage sinecures. Most will, sooner rather than later, change their minds after they understand that they will be
illegitimate - toothless old hacks, flacks and bagmen. It may take 20 years to complete the whole process but, at least, it has begun.
In response to questions he will say that while he prefers some form of provincial equality he cannot see how to manage it without turning the Senate into a 250 seat body, something he does not intend to do. He will also say that he plans to use his power to increase the senate, on a regional basis, to appoint six new senators - one from each territory (selected by the territory, in some form to be agreed) and three others, elected every three or four years by the
Assembly of First Nations, the
Inuit Tapirisat and the
Metis National Council.
Prime Minister Harper will explain that he will establish a new
constitutional convention requiring that senators appointed to the cabinet must be elected; he will respect the Senate's right, even duty, to amend or delay legislation but he will not accept that a defeat in the Senate on a matter of
confidence in the House of Commons would mean a defeat of the government. As now a bill might be rejected by the Senate but, if it is passed again by the House then the GG will sign it into law.
The point is that there are many things which
can be done to reform our
institutions without amending the Constitution; reforming the Senate and ditching the
monarch, in favour of a Canadian regent, are just two of them.