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  1. Each sitting day, the House sets aside a maximum of 45 minutes for Oral Questions, a period known as “Question Period”. The Standing Orders specify that each question should be addressed to: a minister; the spokesperson of the Board of Internal Economy; or. a committee chair, if it is relevant to the relevant committee’s schedule and agenda.

  2. Oral Questions (Question Period) Following Statements by Members, at no later than 2:15 p.m. (11:15 a.m. on Fridays), Question Period takes place for a maximum of 45 minutes. At this time, members may question the government on all matters within its jurisdiction. For more information, see the Our Procedure article about the questions.

  3. The Debates are the report—transcribed, edited, and corrected—of what is said in the House. The Journals are the official record of the decisions and other transactions of the House. The Order Paper and Notice Paper contains the listing of all items that may be brought forward on a particular sitting day, and notices for upcoming items.

  4. Question Period is a unique and distinct part of the daily program of the House. Members who are not satisfied with the answer they receive to an oral question may pursue the matter at greater length during the Adjournment Proceedings, which occur at the end of every sitting except on Fridays.

  5. On each sitting day at no later than 2:15 p.m. (11:15 a.m. on Friday), the 45-minute Question Period begins. At this time, the Speaker recognizes the Leader of the Opposition, or the lead questioner for his or her party, for a round of three questions. From the start of the Thirty-First Parliament in 1979 to the end of the Thirty-Fifth Parliament in 1997, the practice had been to allow the party leader of any other officially recognized pa

  6. House of Commons Sitting Calendar. - 2024. This calendar is determined pursuant to Standing Order 28 (2) (b). Occasionally, the House may adopt special orders to modify the calendar, in which cases this page is updated as soon as possible. For more information please see House of Commons Procedure and Practice, Chapter 8, "The Parliamentary ...

  7. A question ruled out of order during Question Period for any reason other than its lack of urgency is not admissible for debate during the Adjournment Proceedings. [128] As well, questions addressed to committee Chairs during Question Period may not be the subject of debate during the Adjournment Proceedings. [129] Historical Perspective

  8. In the early 1960s, however, the nature of Question Period was briefly changed when the Speaker began to enforce several long-standing unwritten rules regarding question content, many of which were outdated. The resulting furor eventually led to the adoption, in 1964, of the first-ever codification of Question Period rules. Yet only the urgency ...

  9. Jul 12, 2017 · The adjournment debate is used as a vehicle for brief exchanges (questions from Members and responses from Ministers or Parliamentary Secretaries). 127 A question ruled out of order during Question Period for any reason other than its lack of urgency is not admissible for debate during the Adjournment Proceedings, 128 nor may questions addressed to committee Chairs during Question Period be the subject of debate during the Adjournment Proceedings. 129

  10. Once moved, a question-and-answer period of not more than 30 minutes takes place to allow members to question the minister responsible for the item subject to the closure motion, after which the question is put on the motion. The vote on the closure motion is one of the exceptions that cannot be deferred without the consent of all parties.