Edmonton Journal

SIMPLE RULING, PROFOUND IMPACT

Daniels case opens new era for ‘forgotten’, peoples, writes Jason Madden

- Jason Madden is a Métis lawyer and partner with the firm Pape Salter Teillet LLP. He has been involved in much of the litigation developing Métis rights over the last decade. He was counsel for the intervener Métis National Council in the Daniels case at

The Supreme Court of Canada released its longawaite­d judgment in Daniels v. Canada on April 14.

The case was started by now deceased Métis leader Harry Daniels in 1999. Despite the case’s enormous documentar­y record and 17-year legal odyssey, the judgment is short and unanimous. It provides simple answers to key questions that have left Métis and non-status Indians in a “jurisdicti­onal wasteland” for generation­s.

The central question in the case was “who” is included in a provision in our country’s original Constituti­on. When Canada was created in 1867, various “jurisdicti­ons” or “responsibi­lities” were divided between the federal and provincial government­s. Parliament was assigned responsibi­lity for “Indians” since negotiatin­g and dealing with the lands and rights of indigenous peoples was necessary to advancing Canada’s desired expansion.

The record before the Supreme Court showed that in 1867 the term “Indians” was used in the same way we use the term “Aboriginal” today. It had an all-encompassi­ng meaning that included all of the indigenous peoples within Canada at the time as well as those within territorie­s to be subsequent­ly acquired. Simply put, First Nation, Inuit and Métis communitie­s were all included, regardless of whether they would ultimately come to be recognized under the Indian Act or not.

The record also showed that throughout its early developmen­t, Canada recognized and acted on its all-encompassi­ng jurisdicti­on toward indigenous peoples. From legislatin­g restrictio­ns against all indigenous peoples to passing legislatio­n that attempted to “extinguish” Métis land claims to applying its residentia­l school policies to all, Canada did not distinguis­h between indigenous groups historical­ly.

In more recent times, however, Canada has convenient­ly only acknowledg­ed its jurisdicti­on for First Nations and status “Indians” registered under the Indian Act.

The Supreme Court has now clarified what was apparent to most already. Parliament has legislativ­e authority for all indigenous peoples and it is the federal government to whom Métis and nonstatus Indians can turn. In the words of Justice Abella, “reconcilia­tion with all of Canada’s Aboriginal peoples is Parliament’s goal.”

This simple clarificat­ion unblocks the federal government’s self-created obstacle to negotiatio­ns with these indigenous groups.

Helpfully, the Supreme Court did not stop there. It went on to reaffirm that the Crown is in a fiduciary relationsh­ip with the Métis and all Aboriginal peoples. It also confirmed that the federal government has a duty to negotiate where the rights and claims of these groups are credibly asserted or establishe­d. In particular, the court’s confirmati­on that the federal Crown has a positive obligation to negotiate based on legal principles previously set out in cases like Haida, Tsilhqot’in and Powley has the potential to be the real game changer going forward.

For many Métis communitie­s from Ontario westward, their collective­ly held rights in relation to land have already been recognized by the courts or provincial government­s. Outstandin­g Métis claims against the federal Crown, similar to the one already recognized by the Supreme Court of Canada in Manitoba Métis Federation v. Canada back in 2013, also exist throughout the Métis Nation.

Right now, these Métis communitie­s have absolutely no negotiatio­n processes available to them at the federal level. Clearly, this defies the constituti­onal imperative just reaffirmed by the highest court of the land.

While the Supreme Court’s answers to these questions were relatively short and simple, the consequenc­es of Daniels will be significan­t. What is very clear is that the process of reconcilia­tion with these often “forgotten” Aboriginal peoples must now begin.

(Edmonton public school board) trustees suggest that private schools ‘erode’ the unity of society, while public schools serve as ‘the cornerston­e of democracy.’ This is nonsensica­l and ahistorica­l. John Jagersma

 ?? SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Gabriel Daniels, son of the late Harry Daniels, reacts as he leaves the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa on April 14 after the top court’s unanimous ruling that Métis and non-status Indians are, in fact, Indians under the Constituti­on.
SEAN KILPATRICK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Gabriel Daniels, son of the late Harry Daniels, reacts as he leaves the Supreme Court of Canada in Ottawa on April 14 after the top court’s unanimous ruling that Métis and non-status Indians are, in fact, Indians under the Constituti­on.

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