Joint address (Canada)
{{Short description|Special procedure of Canadian Parliament}}
File:President Nixon Addresses a joint session of the Canadian Parliament, in Ottawa, Canada - NARA - 194761.tif addresses a joint session of the Parliament of Canada, 1972]]
A joint address is a special procedure of the Canadian Parliament, in which members of the House of Commons and Senate sit jointly in the former chamber, the latter acting, for the occasion, as an auditorium. The speaker of the House of Commons takes his chair, as normal, with the speaker of the Senate seated to their right. Members of Parliament also take their usual seats, with senators and justices of the Supreme Court positioned on the floor of the House, in front of the clerk's table. Gallery privileges are suspended during a joint address and access to those areas is strictly limited to invited guests.
Circumstances
Such an event is used most commonly when a visiting dignitary—such as a foreign head of state or head of government—is asked to address Parliament. However, on more rare occasions, the process may also be used to make a formal, binding request of the Canadian monarch; for example, this was part of the process used to amend the constitution of Canada prior to patriation in 1982.{{Citation| last=Lederman| first=William| publication-date=1983| contribution=The Supreme Court of Canada and Basic Constitutional Amendment| editor-last=Banting| editor-first=Keith G.| editor2-last=Simeon| editor2-first=Richard| title=And No One Cheered: Federalism, Democracy, and the Constitution Act| page=177| publication-place=Toronto| publisher=Taylor & Francis| isbn=978-0-458-95950-1| url=https://books.google.com/books?id=sUwOAAAAQAAJ| access-date=12 June 2010| year=1983}} In extreme circumstances, a joint address may also be used to remove a person previously appointed by the King-in-Council—such as a judge or ambassador—if other avenues of doing so have failed. For example, Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson announced a joint address in 1967 to have Leo Landreville removed from the bench of the Supreme Court of Ontario, due to allegations of improper stock trading. Landreville had previously refused to resign, as he had not actually been convicted of a crime, but, resigned voluntarily after the government declared its intention to forcibly remove him from office.{{Cite book| last=Kaplan| first=William| title=Bad Judgment: The Case of Mr Justice Leo A. Landreville| publisher=University of Toronto Press| date=June 1996| location=Toronto| isbn=978-0-8020-0836-7| url-access=registration| url=https://archive.org/details/badjudgmentcaseo0000kapl}}
Although most addresses are made to joint sessions of Parliament, on 7 May 1941, Robert G. Menzies, Prime Minister of Australia, spoke only to the House of Commons. On 25 August 1943, Franklin D. Roosevelt, President of the United States, addressed senators, members of Parliament, and the general public outside the houses of Parliament.{{cite web| url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/ParlInfo/compilations/parliament/HeadsOfStatesAddress.aspx| author=Parliament of Canada| title=Heads of States and of Governments who have addressed Joint Sessions of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada| publisher=Queen's Printer for Canada| access-date=4 May 2015}}
Dignitaries
The following persons have addressed a joint session of Parliament:{{Cite book|title=HOUSE OF COMMONS PROCEDURE AND PRACTICE|year=2017|editor-last=Bosc|editor-first=Marc|edition=3rd|chapter=Chapter 9 Sittings of the House|editor-last2=Gagnon|editor-first2=André|chapter-url=https://www.ourcommons.ca/About/ProcedureAndPractice3rdEdition/ch_09_4-e.html}}
=Winston Churchill=
During the Second World War, Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, stopped in Ottawa after meetings with the United States government in Washington, D.C. Churchill spoke to a joint meeting of Canada’s parliamentarians in the House of Commons on 30 December 1941, delivering an "electrifying address that stirs the passions and strengthens the resolve of a nation at war."[http://www.cbc.ca/archives/entry/1941-churchills-chicken-speech "1941: Winston Churchill's 'chicken' speech"] CBC Digital Archives. Accessed 14 March 2017. In responding to a French general's claim that, "England will have her neck wrung like a chicken" in three weeks time from a German invasion, Churchill declared, "some chicken! Some neck!" The response was met by a roar of laughter and thunderous applause.[http://www.ottawachurchillsociety.com/some-chicken-some-neck "Some Chicken! Some Neck! Prime Minister Winston Churchill's Speech to the House of Commons"] Sir Winston Churchill Society of Ottawa. Accessed 14 March 2017 Churchill would go on to lead the Allied effort to victory in the Second World War.
=Richard Nixon=
President of the United States Richard Nixon arrived in Ottawa on a state visit on 13 April 1972. He met with Governor General Roland Michener and Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau before addressing a joint meeting of the Parliament of Canada.[https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/travels/president/nixon-richard-m "M. Nixon - Travels of the President"] State Department: Office of the Historian. Accessed 14 March 2017 Nixon, invoking his Nixon Doctrine on foreign policy, struck a blunt tone in his remarks. "Canadians and Americans [must] move beyond the sentimental rhetoric of the past. It is time for us to recognize that we have very separate identities [...] Each nation must determine the path of its own progress."[http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=3377&st=&st1= "Nixon: Address to a Joint Meeting of the Canadian Parliament"] The American Presidency Project. Accessed 14 March 2017 Bruce Muirhead wrote that, after the state visit, "Nixon returned to Washington with a reinforced dislike of Ottawa, Trudeau, and most things Canadian. He told his chief of staff, H.R. Haldeman, that he had put it to these people for kicking the US around after what we did for that lousy son of a bitch [Trudeau]. Wasting three days up there. That trip we needed like a hole in the head."Muirhead, Bruce. From Special Relationship to Third Option: Canada, the U.S., and the Nixon Shock. American Review of Canadian Studies: 1 October 2004. DOI: 10.1080/02722010409481207. Accessed 14 March 2017
=Ronald Reagan=
After meeting with Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, American president Ronald Reagan addressed the Canadian Parliament on 11 March 1981,[https://history.state.gov/departmenthistory/travels/president/reagan-ronald "Reagan - Travels of the President"] State Department: Office of the Historian. Accessed 14 March 2017. speaking humbly about the strong Canada-US relationship. "America counts many friends across the globe, surely we have no better friend than Canada."[http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=43518&st=&st1= "Reagan: Remarks of the President and Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau of Canada Before a Joint Session of the Parliament in Ottawa"] The American Presidency Project. Accessed 14 March 2017. Reagan even demonstrated his ability to use both of Canada’s official languages when he spoke several phrases in French. The President concluded his remarks by offering an olive branch to the people of Canada: "We're happy to be your neighbour. We want to remain your friend. We're determined to be your partner and we're intent on working closely with you in a spirit of cooperation."[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n2YAu8JV6Es "President Reagan addresses Canadian Parliament"] Youtube. Accessed 14 March 2017 Reagan addressed the Canadian Parliament once more as president, in 1987.[http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=34072 "Address to a Joint Session of Parliament in Ottawa, Canada"] The American Presidency Project. Accessed 14 March 2017
=Margaret Thatcher=
Margaret Thatcher. then-Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, addressed Parliament on 26 September 1983. Only one year after the patriation of the Canadian constitution, Thatcher recognized that, "a constitutional link has, quite properly, been severed," but Canada and the United Kingdom are still linked in important ways, including the belief "in the same high and honourable ideals", like freedom, justice, and parliamentary democracy.[http://www.margaretthatcher.org/document/105440 "Speech to Canadian Parliament"] Margaret Thatcher Foundation. Accessed 14 March 2017 In 2013, after a 30-year ban on classified Cabinet files had expired, documents from the British National Archives revealed that, prior to her trip to Ottawa, Thatcher had been briefed to be careful of Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau's "unsound personal views" and of Canadians "inordinately sensitive" nature.Waldie, Paul and Leblanc, Daniel. [https://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/national/declassified-documents-reveal-british-views-of-inordinately-sensitive-canadians/article13545855/ "Thatcher briefing warned of Canadian sensitivity, Trudeau’s opinions"] The Globe and Mail: 1 August 2013. Accessed 14 March 2017. Thatcher, by then the Lady Thatcher, returned to Canada in 1988 and, at the invitation of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, addressed Parliament again.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xy9QXQ8BSpw "Margaret Thatcher addresses Canadian Parliament (1988)"] Youtube. Accessed 14 March 2017.
=Nelson Mandela=
Mere months after being released from 27 years prison, South Africa's Nelson Mandela became only the fourth person who was not a head of state or head of government to address a joint session of the Parliament of Canada. Mandela thanked Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and the government of Canada for its strong opposition to the apartheid regime in South Africa and pleaded to keep the sanctions in place to pressure the South African government towards reform. In 1998, Mandela returned to address the Canadian Parliament as the first democratically elected president of South Africa.[http://www.cbc.ca/archives/entry/mandela-visits-canada "Nelson Mandela visits Canada"] CBC Digital Archives. Accessed 14 March 2017
=Aga Khan=
Prime Minister Stephen Harper invited the Aga Khan to address Canada’s Parliament in February 2014. The spiritual leader and 49th hereditary Imam of the Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims spoke of the "unprecedented honour" to speak in the House of Commons and called Canada an "exemplary leader" in the "global effort to foster peace, prosperity, and equality through pluralism." The Aga Khan was bestowed honorary Canadian citizenship and, fresh after the 2014 Winter Olympics, joked that he hoped be asked to join the Canadian Olympic hockey team.[http://www.lop.parl.gc.ca/content/lop/About/parliament/Speeches/AgaKhan-e.htm "Address of His Highness Aga Khan 49th Hereditary Imam of the Shia Imami Ismaili Muslims to both Houses of Parliament in the House of Commons Chamber, Ottawa"] Library of the Parliament of Canada. Accessed 14 March 2017.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wmceDCn6bF8 "Aga Khan addresses Parliament of Canada and signs protocol with Prime Minister"] Youtube. Accessed 14 March 2017.
=Barack Obama=
Immediately following the 2016 Three Amigos Summit in Ottawa, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invited United States president Barack Obama to address the Parliament of Canada on 29 June 2016. Obama delivered a portrait of the "extraordinary alliance and deep friendship between Canadians and Americans." Nearing the end of his term in office, and fresh off the Brexit vote in the United Kingdom, Obama spoke in defence of the international liberal order in the face of rising isolationist sentiment around the world. Obama offered an endorsement of Trudeau when he said that, "my time in office may be nearing an end, but I know that Canada—and the world—will benefit from your [Trudeau’s] leadership [sic] for years to come." The President also quoted the Prime Minister's late father, Pierre Trudeau: "A country is not something you build as the pharaohs built the pyramids [...] A country is something that is built every day out of certain basic shared values." This was Obama’s second state visit to Canada, but the first time addressing a joint session of Parliament.[https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/the-press-office/2016/06/30/remarks-president-obama-address-parliament-canada "Remarks by President Obama in Address to the Parliament of Canada"] The White House: President Barack Obama. Accessed 14 March 2017.[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kAxaeB9-E70 "President Obama Addresses Parliament"] Youtube. Accessed 14 March 2017.
See also
References
{{reflist}}
External links
- [http://www2.parl.gc.ca/Parlinfo/compilations/parliament/HeadsOfStatesAddress.aspx Heads of States and of Governments who have addressed Joint Sessions of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada]
Category:Parliamentary procedure in Canada