{"id":3707,"date":"1964-12-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1964-12-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1964-vol-45-no-12-parliament-is-700-years-old\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T01:26:40","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T01:26:40","slug":"december-1964-vol-45-no-12-parliament-is-700-years-old","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1964-vol-45-no-12-parliament-is-700-years-old\/","title":{"rendered":"December 1964 &#8211; Vol. 45, No. 12 &#8211; Parliament is 700 Years Old"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\">Feeling their way toward an ideal                     of self-government, men have invented many sorts of assemblies                     and parliaments in many countries.<\/p>\n<p> The year 1965 marks the seven hundredth anniversary of the                     birth of Parliament in England, the ancestor of Parliament                     as it is practised in Canada. That event took place only fifty                     years after another landmark in man&#8217;s struggle for freedom,                     the sealing of Magna Charta.<\/p>\n<p>Today, the distinguishing monument of the western world                     is not an arch like those in the Roman Forum, nor a temple                     on a Greek hill, nor an automated factory, nor a towering                     skyscraper. It is a little booth made by draping sheets over                     a clothes-horse in somebody&#8217;s basement, or by standing                     blackboards around a school desk, or by putting old advertising                     placards around the counter in a vacant store: it is the polling                     booth in which free men and women declare their political                     will.<\/p>\n<p>The parliament elected by these voters did not blossom overnight,                     but grew from roots that strike deep into old traditions and                     old customs, and have survived many storms and many droughts.                     The &#8220;deep speech&#8221; of Saxon kings with their wise men finds                     its counterpart today in the Canadian Parliament&#8217;s Speech                     from the Throne, the address in reply, and the debates which                     follow.<\/p>\n<p>It is usual to speak of the Parliament in Great Britain                     as &#8220;The Mother of Parliaments.&#8221; It is so in the sense that                     it has nurtured other parliaments throughout the world. Wherever                     people from Britain have gone to settle, they have carried                     with them the conviction that they ought to have a parliament                     of their own. The pioneer settlers in America brought parliament                     with them as part of their equipment; the first Charter of                     Virginia, signed by King James I, provided the pioneers with                     &#8220;all liberties, franchises and immunities, as if they had                     been abiding and born within this our realm.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>For the beginnings of all this, says George Hambleton in                     <em>The Parliament of Canada<\/em>, we must look back to early                     England, to its struggles with the Crown, its battles for                     free speech and all those other &#8220;immunities and privileges&#8221;                     which the Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons still formally                     claims from the Queen&#8217;s representative, and which he still                     formally grants, at the opening of every new Parliament.<\/p>\n<p>So earnestly do we believe in the value of a system which                     is endorsed so widely that we are distressed to find any country                     which is not politically democratic. Our fingers itch to give                     them a parliament and universal suffrage and the secret ballot.<\/p>\n<p>But, as Alfred North Whitehead put it: &#8220;This notion that                     in any part of the earth, no matter how barbarous its previous                     history or how backward its people, all you need do is give                     everybody the vote is idiotic.&#8221; No nation that passes abruptly                     from subservience under a despot to the completely unfamiliar                     state of political independence can be said to have a fair                     chance of making democratic institutions work.<\/p>\n<p>Democracy is a high and difficult enterprise. We ourselves                     arrived at it by long and laborious development. It was not                     imposed upon us: we grew into it and built it around us through                     twenty generations in seven centuries.<\/p>\n<p>Why and how did it come about? The English achieved far                     earlier than their neighbours the status of a national as                     distinct from a feudal or parochial existence. Starting in                     1265, they gradually extended the power of the people. By                     the sixteenth century the faint outlines of Parliament began                     to be discernible, and the House of Commons was mentioned                     in the dispatches of ambassadors as an institution of importance.                     In the seventeenth century it had been definitely settled                     that sovereignty should rest with the king in parliament and                     not with the king alone or with the king in council.<\/p>\n<h3>Government<\/h3>\n<p>Government originated in the family life of ancient times.                     Wherever human beings live together there must be someone                     in charge, someone to give direction. When several families                     joined in tribes, a member of the group acted as leader. It                     was only gradually that men learned that by reasoning together                     they could solve problems more efficiently than could be done                     by one person.<\/p>\n<p>Their ideas expanded with their hopes. They began to ask,                     as voters need to ask today: What do we want of life? How                     much of what we want of the good life can government give                     us? What sort of government will be most efficient? What qualities                     should we demand of those who form the government?<\/p>\n<p>All governments, ancient and modern, have this one thing                     in common: power. Their power is of three kinds: legislative,                     which is the power to make laws; executive, which is the power                     to enforce laws; and judicial, which is the power to try those                     accused of breaking the law.<\/p>\n<p>The best sort of government is one in which these powers                     are directed toward providing every citizen with comfortable,                     safe and peaceful living in secure enjoyment of his property                     and freedom.<\/p>\n<p>We hear, over the ages, the voice of Plato murmuring that,                     after all, the best form of government is government by good                     men. Churchill brought us up to date when he said: &#8220;Thus we                     had arrived at those broad, happy uplands where everything                     is settled for the greatest good of the greatest number by                     the common sense of most after the consultation of all.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Democratic liberty<\/h3>\n<p>&#8220;Democracy&#8221; is a word charged with great human hopes. It                     is based upon the concept of political liberty, in which personal                     freedom is limited only by the idea of equality, a thought                     which is the slow fruit of ages.<\/p>\n<p>Democracy means to us a form of government for free and                     upright people who take pride in governing themselves and                     who do govern themselves. The wise laws and just restraints                     decided by their freely-elected government are not chains                     restricting their freedom.<\/p>\n<p>Writing in praise of the English constitution, the famous                     French writer Voltaire declared in his <em>Philosophical Dictionary                     <\/em>after tabulating liberty of person and property, freedom                     of the press, the right of being tried only according to the                     strict letter of the law, and freedom of religion: &#8220;I will                     venture to assert that, were the human race solemnly assembled                     for the purpose of making laws, such are the laws they would                     make for their security.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It cost much to establish these laws, and they came into                     being and exist today only under democratic parliamentary                     government.<\/p>\n<p>It is true that the notion of democracy was born in Athens                     2,400 years ago, but it was limited to certain classes of                     people. During the past 750 years we have developed the system                     of government under which every mature citizen has the right                     to a voice in choosing those who shall govern in such a way                     as to give sound administration and social contentment.<\/p>\n<p>We must believe in democracy, for what is the alternative?                     We can live happily together in today&#8217;s world only if we are                     zealous in protecting our own liberty and solicitous for the                     liberty of everyone else. Aldous Huxley warned us in his book                     <em>Brave New World Revisited<\/em>: &#8220;The young people who now                     think so poorly of democracy may grow up to become fighters                     for freedom. The cry of &#8216;Give me television and hamburgers,                     but don&#8217;t bother me with the responsibilities of liberty&#8217;                     may give place, under altered circumstances, to the cry of                     &#8216;Give me liberty or give me death&#8217;.&#8221; Democratic education                     should aim at producing men and women who will be able to                     maintain a self-governed state because they are themselves                     self-governed, self-controlled, self-reliant.<\/p>\n<h3>Magna Charta<\/h3>\n<p>Half a century before the first parliament, whose advent                     700 years ago is celebrated in 1965, the Great Charter was                     sealed. On a stormy day in 1215, on a marshy islet in the                     river at Runnymede, a committee of angry nobles extorted from                     reluctant King John a promise that in future he would adhere                     to the law of the land.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Here commences the history of the English nation,&#8221; said                     Lord Macaulay. The narrative of preceding events is the recital                     of wrongs inflicted and sustained by various tribes. Henceforth                     the nation had a constitution which has ever since, through                     all vicissitudes, preserved its identity; a constitution of                     which all other free constitutions in the world are copies.<\/p>\n<p>The Charter, one of the most significant documents in the                     long history of government, was designed to diminish the power                     of the king and to guarantee a measure of freedom. It marks                     the transition from an age of traditional rights, preserved                     in the nation&#8217;s memory, to the age of written legislation,                     of parliaments and statutes.<\/p>\n<p>One copy of the Charter is to be seen in the British Museum,                     injured by age and fire, but with the royal seal still hanging                     from its brown, shrivelled parchment. That seal now has the                     dramatic endorsement of the democratic commonwealths of mankind.<\/p>\n<p>On the memorial cairn at Runnymede is inscribed: &#8220;In these                     meads on 15th June 1215 King John at the instance of deputies                     from the whole community of the realm granted the Great Charter,                     the earliest of constitutional documents whereunder ancient                     and cherished customs were confirmed, abuses redressed, the                     administration of justice facilitated, new provisions formulated                     for the preservation of peace, and every individual perpetually                     secured in the free enjoyment of his life and property.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Parliament<\/h3>\n<p>The word &#8220;parliament&#8221; is found in English from the thirteenth                     century, first for a debate, then for a formal conference,                     and then for the great councils of the Plantagenet kings.                     In French, &#8220;parlement&#8221; is the name given to a meeting for                     discussion or debate, but from the latter half of the thirteenth                     century it was employed to designate the sessions of the royal                     court, and today it has the same meaning as &#8220;parliament&#8221; in                     English.<\/p>\n<p>&#8220;Parliament&#8221; first appeared in an English statute in 1275,                     being used to describe the Great Council. It was a gathering                     of representatives of the kingdom to &#8220;talk over&#8221; matters of                     importance.<\/p>\n<p>The origin of parliaments goes back far beyond this. The                     Anglo-Saxons had assemblies known as the folkmoot, the                     tribal assembly, and the shire moot, which was an assembly                     of the freemen of the shire. Superior to these was the witenagemot,                     or assembly of wise men with whom the king took counsel in                     legislation and government. By the time William the Conqueror                     arrived in England in 1066 the principle that the king should                     govern only with the advice of his counsellors had been firmly                     established.<\/p>\n<p>However, something was needed to give permanency and solidity                     to the arrangement. Whereas the Great Charter of 1215 was                     mainly concerned to define points of law, the Provisions of                     Oxford in 1258 and Westminster in 1259 sought to deal with                     the overriding question: by whose advice and through what                     officials shall the government be carried on?<\/p>\n<p>Six years later Simon de Monffort summoned to the famous                     Parliament of January 28, 1265 five earls and eighteen barons,                     a large body of clergy, two knights from each shire, and two                     citizens from each of twenty-one specified towns. While                     this did not give de Montfort a clear claim to the title sometimes                     given him as the &#8220;founder of the House of Commons&#8221; it was,                     nonetheless, an important stage in its development. The burgesses,                     or common people, had never before received direct representation.                     Here, says the <em>Harmsworth Encyclopedia<\/em>, were &#8220;all the                     essential elements of the parliament of today.&#8221; By this silent                     revolution the whole body of freeholders were admitted to                     a share in the government of the realm.<\/p>\n<p>What de Montfort&#8217;s motives were is of little account. His                     act marked the first definite step along the road to representative                     government. The contests which follow are not conquests which                     affect the actual fabric of our political institutions. They                     are simply stages in the rough discipline by which we have                     learned how best to use and develop the latent powers of our                     national life and how to adjust the balance of its social                     and political forces in changing times and conditions.<\/p>\n<p>Representation by selection is a very great thing. A parliament                     is not a meeting of ambassadors from different and hostile                     interests, but a deliberative assembly with one interest,                     that of the whole nation. It is not local purposes or local                     prejudices that ought to guide, but the general good.<\/p>\n<h3>How parliament works<\/h3>\n<p>In our parliamentary system the legislative power is controlled                     by parliament, composed of the Senate and the House of Commons,                     the executive power by the cabinet, and the judicial power                     by the courts.<\/p>\n<p>The history of parliament, says Dr. George W. Brown in <em>Canadian                     Democracy in Action<\/em>, is largely the story of the way in                     which the House of Commons gradually gained control over the                     powers held by kings. Nevertheless, the sovereign is still                     a part of parliament. The Queen has the right to be informed                     as to what the cabinet is doing, and to be given all the information                     which it has, secret and otherwise; and the right to advise                     and warn the cabinet, even though it may not accept her advice.<\/p>\n<p>With the increasing volume of legislation in the House of                     Commons, the value of the Senate, with its more deliberate                     debates, makes its merit seen.<\/p>\n<p>The grievous thing, said the late Senator L. Moraud when                     replying to those who advocate its dissolution, &#8220;would be                     not the disappearance of the Senate itself but the wiping                     out of the protection which by its very nature this body ensures                     to minorities and to the established social system.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The Cabinet, composed of ministers selected from the party                     which for the time being holds a majority in the House of                     Commons, is one of the most important features in the parliamentary                     system. The seventeenth century had proved that government                     was impossible without the co-operation of the House                     of Commons; the experience of the eighteenth century had shown                     that such co-operation could only be maintained by the                     selection of the king&#8217;s ministers from the party dominating                     the House. The first part of the twentieth century has seen                     a vast increase in the power of the cabinet, shifting to some                     degree the centre of political forces from the floor of the                     House.<\/p>\n<p>The official Opposition is an integral part of the parliamentary                     system. The only way in which a. human being can make some                     approach to knowing the whole of a subject is by hearing what                     can be said about it by persons of every variety of opinion.                     Within the unity of those who believe in the parliamentary                     system there must be diversity of opinion about many things.<\/p>\n<p>Opposition provides a stern criticism of the government&#8217;s                     policy and excites public interest in the matters being debated.<\/p>\n<p>The Opposition, however, is not all negative. It has to                     have a viable alternative to offer to a government proposal.                     It needs to keep a shrewd sense of the perspective of politics                     as seen from below Parliament Hill.<\/p>\n<p>Political parties are another essential part of parliamentary                     government. The <em>Encyclopedia Britannica <\/em>says in an                     unexpectedly pert paragraph: &#8220;Parliament is an engine which                     seems to require the fuel of party spirit to make it work.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>A political party consists of a group of persons united                     in opinion or action, which seeks to control the personnel                     and policies of government. When there are two or more parties                     in the field, this circumstance removes the danger of the                     permanent surrender of power to a single set of leaders. The                     rule of the majority is tolerable, because it is at any time                     a temporary and replaceable majority. The fact that the Opposition,                     the temporary minority, has almost equal support in the country                     gives reality to the function of opposition and is a guarantee                     of moderation.<\/p>\n<p>Political parties would find themselves attracting more                     members if they gave constant and intelligent attention to                     issues rather than to personalities. They could, in fact,                     enhance their status by adopting precepts not always associated                     with party politics: tolerance, sensitive intelligence, and                     logical reasoning.<\/p>\n<p>How different from this is the picture of politicians painted                     by Princess Victoria in a letter to the King of the Belgians:                     &#8220;I think great violence and striving such a pity, on both                     sides. They irritate one another so uselessly by calling one                     another fools, blockheads, liars, and so forth, for no purpose.&#8221;                     To this the King replied: &#8220;People are far from acting generally                     according to the dictates of their interests, but oftener                     in consequence of their passions.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Modern parliament<\/h3>\n<p>The contemporary problem is to adapt the methods of parliament                     to the changing business of government. Parliament cannot,                     any more than can business, continue unchanged decade after                     decade. The structure and habits of society have been transformed,                     the scope of the government&#8217;s responsibility has been vastly                     extended, and the circumstances of the country, both domestic                     and vis-\u00e0-vis other nations, have been drastically                     altered by the scientific revolution.<\/p>\n<p>Whatever changes are made, and they may be as stimulating                     as any in the past, there are certain essential things that                     must be preserved. The price of liberty is more certainly                     than ever political vigilance to keep sound the rights and                     privileges of the parliamentary way. It would be futile indeed                     if the garments of royalty plucked from kings in the long                     history of development of democracy were now dusted off to                     adorn legislators.<\/p>\n<p>Recalling how ancient empires lost their hard-won freedom                     by listlessness, George Hambleton wrote in 1951: &#8220;To stand                     still is to retreat. And, if we retreat, weak and irresolute                     parliaments will again give rise to oligarchic forms of government,                     little removed from the tyrannies of medieval kings.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Today&#8217;s outburst of public demonstrations in many countries                     is an evidence of anti-parliamentarianism. Here are people                     who care passionately about affairs ranging from the nuclear                     bomb through racial equality to parish problems who have no                     confidence in the efficacy of political action. By their parades                     and displays they are really expressing a profound subconscious                     defeatism about their own ability to influence events.<\/p>\n<p>The task of parliament is to identify the problems of society,                     to evolve policies from ideas, and to carry through the necessary                     action programmes.<\/p>\n<p>To some people, Sir Winston Churchill&#8217;s presence in the                     House of Commons up to mid 1964, aged and ailing as he was,                     has been his final warning against the neglect of the spirit                     of the Parliament he served for more than sixty years, and                     a reminder of the quality of service it demands. His career                     shows that what gives parliament its life is the will of its                     members to serve it with their full capacities of mind and                     energy and passion.<\/p>\n<h3>Public participation<\/h3>\n<p>Public opinion is the most potent force in the survival                     of parliamentary democracy. People who have made themselves                     sovereign must provide themselves with sound knowledge so                     that they may discharge their sovereign duties with good judgment.                     They need to be mature, free and intelligent.<\/p>\n<p>The danger that most threatens democracy is the ignorant                     and indifferent voter. But education in the duties of self-government                     does not come alone out of books on civics. It requires that                     people be inspired from youth by love of the free and responsible                     life that parliamentary government provides, and a sense of                     obligation to maintain it.<\/p>\n<p>If the citizen does not participate, read, study, and vote,                     then someone else does it for him and he is a free citizen                     no longer. Eisenhower said in <em>Crusade in Europe<\/em>: &#8220;&#8230;                     individual rights and privileges&nbsp;&#8230; can be sustained                     only so long as the citizen accepts his full responsibility                     for the welfare of the nation that protects him in the exercise                     of these rights.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>How can a citizen honestly discharge his responsibilities?                     By voting; by paying a visit to Parliament Hill, observing                     debates at first hand; by reading the official report of Parliament;                     by reading books about Parliament (a list may be obtained                     from the Queen&#8217;s Printer, Ottawa); by paying attention to                     what political parties are planning and saying.<\/p>\n<p>On their part, the government and the parties owe the citizens                     a continuous supply of correct information upon public affairs.<\/p>\n<p>Some of this is available in the daily publication of the                     verbatim reports of speeches in both chambers of Parliament,                     commonly referred to as <em>Hansard<\/em>. Reports appear regularly                     in newspapers and magazines and are given on television and                     radio. It is no exaggeration to say that, so far as information                     goes, every man and woman in Canada today is in better position                     to discuss high questions of state policy than was the average                     member of a seventeenth century parliament.<\/p>\n<p>Besides information and representation, the member of parliament                     owes the country &#8220;his unbiased opinion, his mature judgment,                     and his enlightened conscience.&#8221; Edmund Burke said so in 1774,                     and his affirmation still stands.<\/p>\n<p>The parliamentary system of government built up so laboriously                     over these seven hundred years will continue strong and flourishing                     so long as the leaders regard their own interests as best                     served by pursuing the interests most advantageous to the                     country, and the citizens respond faithfully and fully by                     wise selection and just support.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[44],"class_list":["post-3707","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-44"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>December 1964 - Vol. 45, No. 12 - Parliament is 700 Years Old - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/december-1964-vol-45-no-12-parliament-is-700-years-old\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"December 1964 - Vol. 45, No. 12 - Parliament is 700 Years Old - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Feeling their way toward an ideal of self-government, men have invented many sorts of assemblies and parliaments in many countries. The year 1965 marks the seven hundredth anniversary of the birth of Parliament in England, the ancestor of Parliament as it is practised in Canada. 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The year 1965 marks the seven hundredth anniversary of the birth of Parliament in England, the ancestor of Parliament as it is practised in Canada. 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