Up in the galleries sat members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, facing the New Democrats who were prepared to spend hours more championing their rights.
Members of the public trickled in and out of the seats devoted to them and pages wandered on and off the floor, bringing glasses of water with lemons or ice. Their time in the Commons was supposed to be up on Thursday as well, but now it was uncertain when they’d get to go home.
But once the Tories had spoken to their bill, most of them streamed out of the House. Layton rose to his feet to give his response to the bill backed by all of his caucus colleagues.
Not a BlackBerry was thumbed as they listened in rapture to their leader, rising more than a half dozen times for standing ovations as he took his fellow politicians through a history of the NDP movement, unions, and their contribution to society.
A promise that the NDP would be introducing amendments to the bill set the rumour mill whirring - would there be a deal between the parties?
“I and our team will be available, regardless of the hour of debate, to talk about the possibility of a solution,” Layton said. But it was not to be. Forty minutes into his address, he moved a procedural motion only, to delay debate on the bill for another six months.
Speaker of the House Andrew Scheer gave up on game of chess he was playing on his iPad, and ceded his chair to a deputy as the MPs began debating that motion.
It was going to be a very long night.
Even into the wee hours of Friday morning, the calendar in the House of Commons still read Thursday, June 23rd. It wasn’t the fault of a clerk asleep at the desk -- the intricacies of parliamentary procedure meant the day debate began was the day it would remain inside parliament until a vote on the bill takes place.
Over the course of the night, Harper made several appearances in the Commons, once standing at the back row and once sitting in front, flanked by ministers as his official photographer snapped memento shots nearby.
By 1:40 a.m. ET Friday, there was one person left in the public gallery.
As their colleagues rose and sat to make their points, many MPs appeared to be trying to keep busy at their desk. Some read through files or tapped away on laptops. At any given time, there were about three dozen MPs in the house, split between majority Tories and opposition. But the rest weren’t far away.
Laughter from the lobbies kept wafting into the cool air of the Commons as the MPs wiled away the night, waiting for the vote. |