432 COMMONS DEBATES May 21, 1869
[...] ing of the article, as he had just read it.
Besides the Government were not responsible
for any newspaper statement.
The Committee reserved the item $40,000
to meet the possible amount beyond the average salaries voted. The items under the
head
Administration of Justice, amounting to $52,000, were also carried; as well as the
items
under the head of Police $43,440; and under
the head Legislation, as far as "Commission
for making provisions for the uniformity of
the laws of the Provinces, $20,000.
In explanation of the item, Sir John A.
Macdonald said the sum set apart for the
Assimiliation of the Laws was about the same
as that voted for the Codification of the Laws
of the old Province of Canada. It was intended that the sittings of the Commission
should be as continuous as possible, so that
by next session the laws of the three Provinces, and possibly also of Newfoundland,
would all be assimilated.
Hon. Mr. Holton asked if it was the intention of
the Government to remunerate, in any way, any member of the House for this
work?
Mr. Mackenzie said that the contemplated course of the
Government would be another infringment of the Independence of Parliament, and Ministers,
if they were wise, would never take such a
step.
Sir John A. Macdonald said that these remarks
were not at all called for and should not have been received until the House
had something before them in which to take action.
Hon. Mr. Holton thought the remarks of the member for
Lambton exceedingly pertinent. A case had been made out in the
showing of the Government, such as has been always felt to warrant their being
gravely censured.
Mr. Mills said that however excellent the projected code
of laws might be in itself, and however desirable it might be to have a uniform
system throughout the Dominion, he looked on any attempt in
the direction indicated as an effort to change our Union from a
federal to a legislative one. When the Government undertook by a
commission to secure a uniform system of laws respecting property and
civil rights, it was in reality an attempt to take away power from the Local
Legis- [...]