How do parties with official opposition status influence Canadian politics? Across the Aisle is an innovative examination of the theory and practice of opposition in Canada, both in Parliament and in provincial legislatures. Extending from the pre-Confederation era to the present day, it focuses on whether Canada has developed a coherent tradition of parliamentary opposition.
David E. Smith argues that Canada has in fact failed to develop such a tradition. He investigates several possible reasons for this failure, including the long dominance of the Liberal party, which arrested the tradition of viewing the opposition as an alternative government; periods of minority government induced by the proliferation of parties; the role of the news media, which have largely displaced Parliament as a forum for commentary on government policy; and, finally, the increasing popularity of calls for direct action in politics.
Readers of Across the Aisle will gain a renewed understanding of official opposition that goes beyond Stornoway and shadow cabinets, illuminating both the historical evolution and recent developments of opposition politics in Canada.
Table of Contents:
PREFACE
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION
Chapter One: Opposition: ‘Somebody Has To Do It’
PART TWO: PARLIAMENTARY OPPOSITION
Chapter Two: From Coalition to Coalition, 1867–1920
Chapter Three: The Liberal Ascendancy, 1921–1956
Chapter Four: Minorities and Majorities, 1957–1992
Chapter Five: The Mill of Opposition, 1993–2011
PART THREE: CHALLENGES FOR PARLIAMENTARY OPPOSITION
Chapter Six: Opposition, More or Less
Chapter Seven: Opposition in the Federation
Chapter Eight: Whither Parliamentary Opposition?
PART FOUR: CONCLUSION
Chapter Nine: The Problem of Parliamentary Opposition Today
NOTES
BIBLIOGRAPHY
About the Author :
David E. Smith is adjunct faculty in the Department of Politics and Public Administration and a member of the Yeates School of Graduate Studies at Ryerson University.
Review :
‘Smith, a leading scholar of the Canadian Parliament, has written an outstanding book on the theory and practice of parliamentary opposition in Canada… It will be of great interest to scholars of Canadian politics, and also to scholars of parliamentary institutions searching in-depth, reliable accounts of Canada’s parliamentary opposition.’ - R. Koop (Choice Magazine; vol 51:07:14) ‘David E. Smith does an excellent job documenting changes and related developments in the concept of both parliamentary and public opposition since confederation, and provides a thoughtful analysis of the many and varied reasons behind those changes.’ - Martha Hall Findlay (Literary Review of Canada vol 22:03:2014) "David E. Smith has produced an elegantly-written, tightly argued and timely scholarly book on the role of the opposition in our Canadian parliamentary democracy...This book will help inform the growing debate on how parliamentarians, including the opposition, can be brought back into the centre of the Canadian political system as our founders intended." - The 2014 Canada Prize in the Social Sciences Jury “One of the best and most important recent books in Canadian politics is Across the Aisle: Opposition in Canadian Politics, by David E. Smith. It is a groundbreaking exploration of the role and evolution of a crucial part of parliamentary governance which, surprisingly, has been seriously understudied in the discipline. … The book will no doubt contribute to new research and prescriptions for change.”
- Emmett MacFarlane, Assistant Professor of political science, University of Waterloo (University Affairs, December 3, 2014) ‘In Across the Aisle, David Smith has done an admirable job of delving into a previously unexplored facet of Canadian politics.’
- Adam Coombs (Histoire sociale / Social History vol 48:97:2015)