I must say I agree wholeheartedly with this editorial. One of the biggest issues, less than 1/4 of women in the House of Commons, yet 1/2 women in the Senate. It's startling to watch CPAC and see this huge divide.
http://www.thestar.com/News/Ideas/article/326541 COVER STORY
TheStar.com | Ideas | Why the Senate deserves props
Why the Senate deserves props
GORDON KING/LIBRARY OF PARLIAMENT
The Senate is one of Canada's most powerful, maligned and yet least understood public bodies, writes Sarah Barmak.
Maybe our upper house of parliament isn't asleep after all. Its alert response to controversial bills on crime, culture and taxes is resonating with Canadians and furnishing it with the unexpected: respect
Mar 09, 2008 04:30 AM
Sarah Barmak
Special to the Star
It is the place where Canada's lawmakers go for sober second thought. Or, as one senator likes to call it, "the pause that refreshes." Or, as the public imagines it, the place where nothing important ever happens. Go on. Think about the Senate, and try hard to stifle a yawn.
Who knew that in 1991, a Senate vote kept abortion legal in Canada? Or that its research in 1971 led to important national poverty reform? Or that it battled to ensure NAFTA was supported by the public? That it has a greater representation of women and minorities than the House of Commons?
In a time when Senate reform has become a multipartisan issue, Canadians seem just as confused about the issue as ever. Our upper house of parliament is one of Canada's most powerful, maligned and yet least understood public bodies.