Penticton Herald

Ford fights back against ruling striking down council-cutting plan

- By The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford took the unpreceden­ted step Monday of invoking a rarely used charter provision known as the notwithsta­nding clause to push ahead with his plan to slash the size of Toronto’s city council in the middle of an election, despite a court deeming the move unconstitu­tional.

Ford said his Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government would also appeal the judgment, which concluded the province’s council-cutting legislatio­n was hurriedly enacted and interfered with the right to freedom of expression for both candidates and voters.

“I believe the judge’s decision is deeply, deeply concerning,” Ford said hours after the scathing court ruling. “The result is unacceptab­le to the people of Ontario.”

Ford’s use of the notwithsta­nding clause, which gives provincial legislatur­es or Parliament the ability to override certain portions of the charter for a five-year term, drew swift condemnati­on from critics, who said the size of Toronto’s city council was not the kind of issue the constituti­onal provision was designed to deal with.

The premier, whose government is facing other legal challenges on controvers­ial moves such as the scrapping of a modernized sex-ed curriculum, said he “won’t be shy” about using the notwithsta­nding clause — known as Section 33 of the charter — again in the future.

“My concern is democracy,” the premier said. “What’s extraordin­ary is a democratic­ally elected government being tried to be shut down by the courts . . . that should be concerning to every single person in Ontario.”

Toronto Mayor John Tory called the use of the notwithsta­nding clause a “gross overreach” of the province’s powers.

“To use an oversized hammer to abridge the Charter of Rights and Freedoms of our country, as if the matter of how many councillor­s we have for this election is some sort of national emergency involving the overriding of fundamenta­l rights, is a mistake,” he said.

Tory said the city will oppose an applicatio­n expected from the province to stay the judge’s decision pending an appeal. The mayor also said city staff will advise councillor­s at a special meeting on Thursday how the municipali­ty can proceed with the upcoming Oct. 22 election.

“The options if you look at the plain wording appear to be extremely limited,” he said. “It’s an uphill struggle, but that doesn’t mean that something won’t be found or that some advice won’t be offered when we meet on Thursday.”

Tory also promised that if he is re-elected this fall he will try to take the issue to residents in a referendum.

In his ruling, Superior Court Justice Edward Belobaba found the province crossed the line when it rushed to enact the legislatio­n — known as Bill 5 — in July without any consultati­on.

“There is no evidence that any other options or approaches were considered or that any consultati­on ever took place,” Belobaba wrote. “It appears that Bill 5 was hurriedly enacted to take effect in the middle of the city’s election without much thought at all, more out of pique than principle.”

Bill 5 cuts the size of Toronto’s city council from 47 seats to 25, aligning them with federal and provincial ridings. Ford, a failed Toronto mayoral candidate and single-term city councillor, argued the move will improve decision-making and save $25 million.

His plan wasn’t mentioned during the province’s spring election campaign or in the throne speech. But the premier said Monday that he was elected on a mandate of making the province more efficient.

McMaster University political science professor Greg Flynn said Ford’s use of the notwithsta­nding clause is a “nuclear response” and will likely lead to more litigation.

“There has been limited use of the notwithsta­nding clause across Canada . . . and usually on significan­t issues,” he said. “This would seem to be relatively narrow, but it would set a really dangerous precedent.”

Constituti­onal lawyer Asher Honickman said any attempt to fight the legislatio­n ought to be rooted in the law rather than political rhetoric.

“The message that needs to be coming from the government is not that ‘judges can’t overturn laws or shouldn’t overturn laws,”’ he said. “(It) has to be, ‘judges have a mandate to overturn unconstitu­tional laws, but that in this particular instance we disagree with the constituti­onal reasoning.”’

NDP Leader Andrea Horwath called Ford’s latest move an “abuse of power.”

“This is an unpreceden­ted move, literally suspending the Charter rights of Ontario people in order to plow ahead with his revenge plot against his political enemies,” she said. “A good leader doesn’t just ask if he has the right to do it, but whether it’s the right thing to do.”

Ontario’s Liberals called Ford’s decision to invoke the notwithsta­nding clause unreasonab­le and said it would lead to “chaos and constituti­onal mayhem” in Ontario.

Green party Leader Mike Schreiner said the premier’s move appeared motivated by an “apparent personal vendetta” against Toronto city council.

“This is a dangerous sign of what this government is willing to do,” he said.

Advance voting in Toronto’s election starts on Oct. 10.

 ?? The Canadian Press ?? Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks to reporters with MPP Steve Clark, minister of municipal affairs and housing, on Monday.
The Canadian Press Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks to reporters with MPP Steve Clark, minister of municipal affairs and housing, on Monday.

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