Speaker Regan's 'naming and shaming' approach to hecklers isn't working - Action News
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Speaker Regan's 'naming and shaming' approach to hecklers isn't working

MPs will sit in the new House of Commons for the first time on Monday, but it will be as noisy as ever.

The Speaker's efforts to rein in the House during question period have increased - but the heckling continues

Speaker of the House of Commons Geoff Regan called individual MPs to order for heckling 318 times since taking the chair in 2015. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

Parliamentarians will take their seats in the new House of Commons for the first time on Monday.But while the setting will be new, the soundtrack will be the same angry, unruly and just plain loud.

Since becoming the Speaker of the House of Commons after the 2015 federal election, Geoff Regan has tried to curbthe worst aspects of question period. Whenever the heckling and jeering has gotten out of hand, Regan has taken the unusual step of calling out offending MPs by name.

It's something his predecessors were reluctant to do butRegan has been doing it more often lately.

Watch Eric discuss heckling in the House of Commons, and the parties' poll positions,on Power & Politics

Heckling in the House

6 years ago
Duration 4:38
Is the Speaker's efforts to root out heckling by naming and shaming working?

Centre Block, where parliamentarians have gathered since the 1920s(after the original building burned to the ground in 1916), is undergoing significant renovations that will last at least a decade. Until those renovations are completed, MPs will gather in the new House located in what used to be the inner courtyard of the West Block on Parliament Hill.

The new House of Commons was already facing some acoustic challenges. It is a cavernous space topped with a glass ceiling, surrounded by corridors from which sound can reverberate off the courtyard's old stone wallsand into the House chamber.

The acoustics are about to get worse once the main players take the stage.

There has been no noticeable decrease in heckling in the House, despite Regan'sefforts which have increased as this current session of Parliament has dragged on.

Over the last weeks of 2015 and throughout 2016, Regancalled individual MPs to order 54 times during question period. In 2017, Regan's interventions nearly doubled to 101. And in 2018, the number of times individual MPs were named by the Speaker jumped again to 163.

That makes a grand total of 318 occasions when Regantook an MP to task for heckling in the House almost one 'naming and shaming' for every sitting day. In all, 80 different MPs have been scolded by Regan.

'Check his water'

Despite the increase in Regan's efforts, hecklers still largely go unadmonishedas virtually no exchange in the House goes uninterrupted.

"I do not usually call out members for heckling,"Regantold the House in June 2017, "unless they have beenpersistently doing it."

Heckles are also rarely captured by Hansard, the official record of debates in the House of Commons.Every so often, however, a heckle is recorded for posterity.

"The cabinet spot is not going to be yours with that kind of answer," Conservative MP Peter Van Loan (who has since resigned his seat) said in May 2017 to Andrew Leslie who indeed remains a parliamentary secretary for the Liberals.

"Check his water," quipped Conservative MP Todd Doherty after failing to be impressed by answers offered by Liberal cabinet minister Jim Carr.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is the MP who has been heckled the most in the House of Commons in part because he has answered every opposition question on Wednesdays. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Most of the time, however, heckles are only recorded in Hansard with the genericinterjection, "Oh, oh!" a practice that goes back tothe first sittings of the House of Commons in 1867.

Conservative MPshave been the ones named by Regan most often 266 times out of 318, or 84 per cent of the total with New Democrats getting a tongue-lashing from the Speaker just 27 times and Liberals only 24 times. While Regan was elected as a Liberal and the New Democrats sit at the far end of the House, furthest away from the Speaker's chair, any observation of question period confirms that Regan's ire has been targeted at the noisiest cohort of the House.

Not surprisingly, the Liberals are those who are heckled the most; they are, after all,the MPsgetting up and providing answers that either do not address the questions posed or do not meet with the approval of opposition members. A Liberal MP was last to speak93 per cent of the time when Regan has named a heckler.

The Commons' top hecklers

So which MPs get scoldedmost often? The top 15 are all Conservatives, with three in particularbeing the most frequent targets of Regan'sdisappointment.

Western Canadian MPs Ed Fast, Kevin Sorensonand Michael Cooperwere each named on 17 occasions.

Not far behind these three were Blake Richardsand Erin O'Toolewith 15 each, David Andersonwith 13, Chris Warkentinwith 12, and Alberta MPs Ron Liepert and Ziad Aboultaif with 11 each.

Ed Fast is one of three Conservative MPs who have been called out for heckling the most by Speaker Geoff Regan, along with Kevin Sorenson and Michael Cooper. (Canadian Press)

The Liberal MP called out most often by Regan was Rodger Cuzner, afellow Nova Scotian, who was named seven times. Two New Democrats were named five times: Peter Julianand Pierre Nantel.

The top of the list is dominated by male MPs, with Conservatives Candice Bergenand Sylvie Bouchercoming in at 12th with eight reprimands apiece. Indeed, 29 of the 32 MPs Regan has called out at least three times are men.

Trudeau the top target

The target of most of the heckling in the House of Commons was Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, the person who had the floor in 69 cases when Regan stepped in. That'sto be expected, sinceTrudeau has gotten into the habit of answering all opposition questions on Wednesdays. Before he began this practice, Trudeau had been heckled about as often as other important members of his cabinet.

Following Trudeau on the heckled list was Finance Minister Bill Morneau (26 times), Environment Minister Catherine McKenna (22 times) and Government House Leader Bardish Chagger (13 times).

Heckling of the opposition itself was far less frequent. But Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer was the opposition member heckled the most (five times), while the top NDP recipient of heckles was former leader Tom Mulcair (twice).

It seems unlikely that Regan will be successful in reducing the cacophony that makes the daily theatre of question period so difficult to follow(notwithout the technical assistance of microphones, at any rate). In the last four days of sittings before the holiday break alone, Regan stood up 13 times to single out an unruly heckler(including the prime minister himself).

But in naming these MPs, Regan is at least putting the unruliest of themon the record for all time. That's the 'naming' part of his strategy. He's still waiting for the 'shaming' to take effect.