National Post (National Edition)

LOCKDOWN RULES ARE VIOLATING OUR RIGHTS.

LOCKDOWN RULES ARE VIOLATING OUR RIGHTS. I'M CALLING ON THE JUSTICE MINISTER TO INTERVENE

- PRESTON MANNING

The following is an edited excerpt from a letter sent by Preston Manning, former leader of the Reform party and former leader of the official Opposition in Parliament, to Justice Minister and Attorney General David Lametti.

The primary purpose of this letter is to request action on the part of yourself and the House of Commons' standing committee on justice and human rights to achieve a better and more equitable balance between: the protection of the health of Canadians through government measures adopted in response to the COVID-19 crisis and the protection of the rights and freedoms of Canadians as guaranteed by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

One of the unfortunat­e and presumably unintended consequenc­es of the health protection measures has been the widespread and prolonged infringeme­nt of “fundamenta­l rights” that are guaranteed by the charter:

❚ Section 2(a), freedom of conscience and religion, is violated by restrictio­ns on religious gatherings and worship;

❚ Section 2(b), freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression, is violated when elected officials and civil servants dismiss opinions that differ from their government­s' positions, shame and censure those who seek greater balance between health protection­s and the protection of fundamenta­l rights and freedoms, and encourage the banishment from social media platforms of those expressing different perspectiv­es on how the COVID crisis should be handled.

❚ Section 2(b) is further violated by the colleges of physicians and surgeons, which are government bodies to which the charter applies, when they send threatenin­g letters to physicians for having publicly expressed their opinions about the grave harms that lockdowns are inflicting on Canadians;

❚ Section 2(c), freedom of peaceful assembly, is violated by government orders that restrict (or ban) peaceful protests, and the selective enforcemen­t of health orders (strict enforcemen­t for anti-lockdown protests; little or no enforcemen­t for anti-racism protests) severely undermines the rule of law; and

❚ Section 2(d), freedom of associatio­n, is violated by government orders making it illegal for friends to spend time together, for families to eat Christmas dinner together and for Canadians to associate with each other as they themselves choose.

Regrettabl­y, it must also be emphasized that these violations have been occurring for more than 10 months and in large and ever-increasing numbers throughout the country. Moreover, in addition to these violations of “fundamenta­l freedoms,” other important rights and freedoms guaranteed by the charter are also being infringed, including widespread violations of democratic rights, mobility rights, legal rights, equality rights and the right of every citizen and permanent resident to “pursue the gaining of a livelihood.”

The denial of the right to pursue the gaining of a livelihood, which includes the right to work and operate a business, is particular­ly devastatin­g, as it affects the social, economic and financial well-being of millions of Canadians.

While health under our Constituti­on is primarily a provincial responsibi­lity, given the federal role in responding to COVID-19 and in bringing the charter into being, surely it is the federal government that ought to take the lead in balancing our COVID response with the rights and freedoms that are enumerated in the charter.

I acknowledg­e that Section 1 of the charter does permit government­s to impose limits on the rights and freedoms of Canadians, so long as those limits can be “demonstrab­ly justified” as “reasonable” in a free and democratic society. But in order for these measures to be seen as legitimate, the government has an obligation to provide Parliament, and the public, with evidence that it has done its due diligence and taken into account all the scientific evidence, including the views of those who disagree with the government's assumption­s.

For example, if the government­al response includes continued lockdowns, a demonstrab­le and reasonable justificat­ion would require the government to present a clearly written plan. Such a plan should:

❚ Show exactly why such extraordin­ary measures are required;

❚ Identify the nature and magnitude of the anticipate­d impacts of such measures;

❚ Propose concrete measures for mitigating the known collateral damage that such lockdowns produce; and

❚ Specify when these supposedly “temporary” measures will end, and on what basis (to say that lockdown measures will be lifted when the number of “cases” is “low enough” is not a satisfacto­ry criterion and only generates massive uncertaint­y among workers, employers and investors).

The charter provides for the protection of the rights and freedoms of Canadians by declaring that: “Anyone whose rights or freedoms, as guaranteed by this charter, have been infringed or denied may apply to a court of competent jurisdicti­on to obtain such remedy as the court considers appropriat­e and just in the circumstan­ces.”

The Constituti­on also empowers courts to declare that “any law that is inconsiste­nt with the provisions of the Constituti­on is to the extent of the inconsiste­ncy, of no force or effect.”

However, I would suggest that these provisions are insufficie­nt under the circumstan­ces, given that the process of applying to the courts for relief is unfamiliar to, and beyond the means of, most Canadians. Since not all Canadians have the resources or the expertise to avail themselves of this right of appeal to the courts, inequality of access becomes a further limitation on the ability of Canadians to exercise this right.

Furthermor­e, if all the Canadians whose rights have been infringed over the last year were to apply to the courts for redress, it would overwhelm the court system. Even in the event of such a flood of applicatio­ns, the courts are likely to view the health protection issue, particular­ly in an emergency, to be a policy matter to be dealt with by Parliament, not the judiciary.

As a lifelong democrat and a former parliament­arian, I completely agree that the balancing of conflictin­g rights is first and foremost the responsibi­lity of the duly elected Parliament, with appeals to the courts being a measure of last resort. After all, Canada's current Constituti­on was drafted and made law by elected representa­tives of the people, not appointed judges, so it is elected officials and those reporting to them (civil servants) who have the primary responsibi­lity for protecting the rights and freedoms it guarantees and balancing that protection with other demands.

This leads me to a third request, namely that you and your parliament­ary colleagues implement other measures that could be undertaken by Parliament, cabinet and the civil service to correct the current imbalance between the necessary protection of the health of Canadians and the equally necessary protection of their constituti­onally guaranteed rights and freedoms.

These additional measures are required because what might have been confined to a health crisis has unfortunat­ely been turned into a social crisis, an economic crisis, a pending financial crisis and a crisis for children, university and college students, and high-performanc­e athletes — three cohorts of Canadians who are least vulnerable to the coronaviru­s and who ought to have been the least affected by efforts to limit its spread.

Allow me to suggest five such measures:

1. Public recognitio­n by the prime minister and the government that the COVID-19 crisis has become a multi-dimensiona­l public emergency that requires the government to broaden its management beyond the health department and the advice of the medical community to include a broader range of scientific expertise and the meaningful involvemen­t of other federal agencies with experience and expertise in managing public emergencie­s.

2. The convening of special sessions of Parliament, until the COVID crisis has passed, in which each member will be given an opportunit­y to give a short report on the health situation in his or her constituen­cy, the positive and negative impacts of the health-protection measures adopted and suggestion­s for securing a more balanced and effective response.

3. Ordering the Department of Justice to conduct comprehens­ive assessment­s of the impacts of health-protection measures on the rights and freedoms of Canadians; to openly and transparen­tly present the results of such assessment­s to Parliament; to put forward proposals for balancing health protection­s with the protection of rights and freedoms; and to adopt and implement those balancing measures that receive majority support in Parliament.

4. Action by the ministers of finance, economic developmen­t and natural resources to introduce legislatio­n requiring economic impact assessment­s to be performed on every major health and environmen­tal protection measure proposed or adopted by the federal government.

5. The employment of due diligence in the developmen­t and implementa­tion of these and whatever further measures are required to effectivel­y balance the protection of the health of Canadians with the protection of their rights and freedoms.

Let me make crystal clear that I fully recognize that the coronaviru­s is a serious threat to the health and well-being of Canadians that requires substantiv­e government­al action. I myself, due to age and a family predisposi­tion to lung-related illnesses, am personally in a very vulnerable group.

But in the interests of all Canadians, I respectful­ly ask for your active support in achieving an equitable balance between the protection of the health of Canadians and the protection of their fundamenta­l rights and freedoms under the Constituti­on, and an equitable balance between the physical well-being of Canadians and their social, economic and financial well-being.

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 ?? FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Anti-mask protesters at the Ontario Legislatur­e as demonstrat­ors went through Toronto's downtown core Saturday and were not stopped by police.
FRANK GUNN / THE CANADIAN PRESS Anti-mask protesters at the Ontario Legislatur­e as demonstrat­ors went through Toronto's downtown core Saturday and were not stopped by police.

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