The provincial NDP says the government’s offer to hold budgetary scrutiny in a limited setting at the Saskatchewan legislature during COVID-19 is not enough.
Ryan Meili, leader of the Saskatchewan NDP, described the government’s offer as a “little crack” and “almost laughable” when Government House Leader Jeremy Harrison proposed opening on June 15 for an eight-day session and five question periods. Meili however wants to know why the government feels their offer is enough.
“We need to have at least 14 days of session and that there is a question period in every one of those days. We don’t have just half opening, but we have the full opportunity to pose the key and important questions,” she stated.
Meili said it cuts the number of hours for estimates nearly in half and is less than what the province deserves for accountability.
It includes 14 days of session with question periods for each of those days and budget estimates at a total of 60 hours.
Meili believes it’s a very reasonable compromise.
“The point of this is not what they are able to get away with, but whether they are going to do what’s right,” added Meili. “We would not have any of this discussion if it was up to the Sask. Party. They would just be keeping things closed.”
He mentioned that when the legislative assembly adjourned on March 17, a motion was passed committing the government to 28 sitting days, which was what the NDP called for last week.