An Act further securing the independence of Parliament
Contents
[edit]An Act further securing the independence of Parliament.
- 2. No contractor with the Gov. of Canada to be a member of the H. of Commons.
- 3. Election of persons disqualified, to be null.
- 4. No disqualified person shall sit or vote.
- 5. Member accepting Office, &c. to vacate his seat.
- 6. Certain Officers may resign one office and accept the same or another within a month without vacating.
- 7. Members may resign their seats.
- 8. Proceedings in such case for issue of new writ, by notice in the House.
- 9. No member to resign while his seat is contested.
- 10. Proceedings when a member wishes to resign, when there is no Speaker, or the member be himself the Speaker.
- 11. Proceedings in case of vacancy, by death or acceptance of office.
- 12. Warrant for filling a vacancy before Parliament meets after a general Election.
31 Victoria, c. 25 (Canada)
An Act further securing the independence of Parliament
[Assented to 22nd May, 1868.]
Her Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Senate and House of Commons of Canada, enacts as follows :
1. Except as hereinafter specially provided—
(1) No person accepting or holding any office, commission or employment in the service of the Government of Canada, at the nomination of the Crown, to which an annual salary, or any fee, allowance or emolument in lien of an annual salary from the Crown is attached, shall be eligible as a Member of the House of Commons, nor shall he sit or vote in the same during the time he holds such office, occupation or employment ;
provided he be elected while holding such office, and not otherwise disqualified ;
(3) Nothing in this section shall render ineligible, as aforesaid, or disqualify to sit or vote in the House of Commons, one of the Commissioners appointed under the Act respecting the Intercolonial Railway, or any Officer of Her Majesty's Army or Navy, or any Officer in the Militia or Militiaman (except Officers on the Staff of the Militia receiving permanent salaries) unless he be otherwise disqualified.
2. No person whosoever holding or enjoying, undertaking or executing, directly or indirectly, alone or with any other, by himself or by the interposition of any trustee or third party, any contract or agreement with Her Majesty, or with any Public Officer or Department, with respect to the public service of Canada, or under which any public money of Canada is to be paid for any service or work, shall be eligible as a Member of the House of Commons, nor shall he sit or vote in the same.
3. If any person hereby disqualified or declared incapable of being elected a Member of the House of Commons, is nevertheless elected and returned as a member, his election and return shall be null and void.
4. No person disqualified by the next preceding sections or by any other law, to be elected a Member of the House of Commons, shall sit or vote in the same while he remains under such disqualification :
and such sum may be recovered from him by any person who will sue for the same, by action of debt, bill, plaint or information in any Court of competent civil jurisdiction in Canada.
but he may be re-elected if he be eligible under the first section of this Act.
6. Nevertheless, whenever any person holding the office of President of the Privy Council, Receiver General, Minister of Finance, Minister of Justice, Minister of Militia and Defence, Secretary of State, Secretary of State for the Provinces, Minister of Public Works, Postmaster General, Minister of Agriculture and Emigration, Minister of Inland Revenue, Minister of Customs, or Minister of Marine and Fisheries, and being at the same time a Member of the House of Commons, resigns his office, and within one month after his resignation accepts any of the said offices, he shall not thereby vacate his seat in the said House of Commons.
7. Any Member of the House of Commons may voluntarily resign and vacate his seat in the manner hereinafter provided.
the Speaker may address his Warrant under his hand and seal, to the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery, for the issue of a Writ for the election of a new member in the place of the member resigning ;
and an entry of the declaration so delivered to the Speaker shall be thereafter made in the Journals of the House ;
(3) And the Member so tendering his resignation, shall be held to have vacated his seat and cease to be a member of such House.
9. But no Member shall so tender his resignation while his election is lawfully contested, nor until after the expiration of the time during which it may by law be contested on other grounds than corruption or bribery.
10. If any Member of the House of Commons wishes to resign his seat in the interval between two Sessions of the Parliament, and there is then no Speaker, or if such Member be himself the Speaker,—he may address and cause to be delivered to any two Members of the House, the declaration before mentioned of his intention to resign ; and such two Members upon receiving such declaration shall forthwith address their warrant under their hands and seals to the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery, for the issue of a new writ for the election of a Member in the place of the Member so notifying his intention to resign, and such writ shall issue accordingly :—And the member so tendering his resignation shall he held to have vacated his seat and cease to be a member of the House.
11. If any vacancy happens in the House of Commons by the death of any Member or by his accepting any Office, the Speaker on being informed of such vacancy by any
Member of the House in his place,—or by notice in writing under the hands and seals of any two Members of the House,—shall forthwith address his warrant to the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery for the issue of a new writ for the election of a Member to fill the vacancy, and a new writ shall issue accordingly :
(2) And if when such vacancy happens, or at any time thereafter before the Speaker's warrant for a new writ has issued, there be no Speaker of the House, or the Speaker be absent from Canada, or if the Member whose seat is vacated be himself the Speaker,—then, any two Members of the House may address their warrant under their hands and seals to the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery for the issue of a new writ for the election of a Member to fill such vacancy, and such writ shall issue accordingly.
12. A warrant may issue to the Clerk of the Crown in Chancery for the issue of a new writ for the election of a Member of the House of Commons to fill up any vacancy arising subsequently to a general election and before the first meeting of Parliament thereafter, by reason of the death or acceptance of office of any Member, and such writ may issue at any time after such death or acceptance of office :
and the report of any Election Committee appointed to try such previous election, shall determine whether the Member who has so died or accepted office, or any other person, was duly returned or elected thereat, which determination, if adverse to the return of such Member and in favor of any other Candidate, shall avoid the election held under this section, and the Candidate declared duly elected at the previous election shall be entitled to take his seat as if no such subsequent election had been held.
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