Calgary Herald

PM says he won’t stand in Premier Ford’s way

Met with mayor, who called it ‘gross overreach’

- Jim Bronskill

OTTAWA • Justin Trudeau made it clear Tuesday he would not block the Ontario government’s use of the Constituti­on’s notwithsta­nding clause to forge ahead with plans to cut the size of Toronto city council, even though he was disappoint­ed with the province’s decision.

The prime minister said he and his government are staunch defenders of Canada’s Charter of Rights and Freedoms because it provides a set of guarantees that Canadians value and identify with as fundamenta­l safeguards.

“So any time a government chooses to invoke the notwithsta­nding clause to override the charter’s protection­s, it has to be done deliberate­ly, carefully and with the utmost forethough­t and reflection,” Trudeau said during an event in Winnipeg.

“But I won’t be weighing in on the debate on how big Toronto municipal council should be,” he added. “We shall respect and allow Ontarians to judge whether their government is doing a good thing or not.”

The notwithsta­nding clause gives provincial legislatur­es and Parliament the ability to usher in legislatio­n that effectivel­y overrides charter provisions, but only for a five-year period.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford took the rarely used step Monday after a judge said it was unconstitu­tional to slash the number of city council seats in the middle of a municipal election without consultati­on, as it interfered with the right to freedom of expression of candidates and voters.

Toronto Mayor John Tory called the premier’s reaction a “gross overreach” of the province’s powers and said in a tweet Monday night that he had met with Trudeau, who was in the provincial capital for a women’s summit, to discuss his concerns.

Federal Intergover­nmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc said the notwithsta­nding clause is an extraordin­ary part of the Constituti­on that should be used only in the most exceptiona­l of cases, after sober considerat­ion.

“The rights and freedoms guaranteed by the charter are of utmost importance in our society and our government will always stand up to defend them,” he said in a statement.

But like the prime minister, LeBlanc stopped short of federal interventi­on, saying Ontarians “will ultimately judge the actions of their provincial government.”

LeBlanc’s suggestion that the notwithsta­nding clause could be invoked in a legitimate emergency makes sense, said Michael Pal, an associate professor of law at the University of Ottawa.

Beyond such exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, a government in Ottawa can play a leadership role in preserving rights and freedoms by refraining from reliance on the provision, he added.

“If the federal government ever starts using the notwithsta­nding clause, it’s very hard to say to a province, ‘Oh, you shouldn’t use it either.’ So the federal government really sets the tone.”

Ontario’s use of the clause in relation to freedom of political expression is worrisome because it could open the door to “some bad places” such as limiting criticism of the government or the right to protest, Pal said. “These are not fanciful scenarios if you look around the world.”

Caroline Mulroney, the daughter of former prime minister Brian Mulroney, serves in Ford’s cabinet as attorney general. The senior Mulroney denounced the notwithsta­nding clause in 1989 as a “major fatal flaw” of the Constituti­on.

Appearing at an event in Ottawa on Tuesday, he said that while in office he “had no interest in using it, no matter what.”

“I had difficulty with anybody invoking a provision that (would) override the Supreme Court of Canada. And that’s why I opposed it then, and that’s why I oppose it today.

“And, no, I haven’t discussed this with my daughter.”

A spokesman for federal Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer had no immediate comment on Ford’s move.

WE SHALL RESPECT AND ALLOW ONTARIANS TO JUDGE.

 ?? JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, seen at a new Canada Goose factory in Winnipeg, said Tuesday he “won’t be weighing in” on Doug Ford’s efforts to downsize Toronto council.
JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, seen at a new Canada Goose factory in Winnipeg, said Tuesday he “won’t be weighing in” on Doug Ford’s efforts to downsize Toronto council.

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