Times Colonist

Debate on Quebec’s notwithsta­nding clause heats up

- JACOB EREBRIN

MONTREAL — Hours after Quebec’s highest court upheld his state secularism law, Premier François Legault was triumphant.

The decision was “a great victory for the nation of Quebec,” he said in a brief statement to reporters Thursday. And he would not shy away from using the Charter of Rights and Freedoms’ notwithsta­nding clause — which he now prefers to call the “parliament­ary sovereignt­y clause” — to ensure Canada respects the choices of Quebecers, he promised.

But the Court of Appeal’s endorsemen­t of the government’s use of the clause — which allows government­s to override fundamenta­l Charter rights — is sparking new debate about the place of the constituti­onal provision.

The use of the notwithsta­nding clause to shield the law, known as Bill 21, from court challenges was a key element of the Appeal Court decision, said Louis-Philippe Lampron, a Université Laval law professor. All the arguments put forward by the law’s opponents were about ways of getting around the clause, he said.

Lampron said the rebranding of the notwithsta­nding clause as the “parliament­ary sovereignt­y clause” by the Legault government is “highly problemati­c.”

“It’s as if we aren’t talking about suspending fundamenta­l rights,” he said. “Talking about parliament­ary sovereignt­y seems to lessen the seriousnes­s of this act, which puts determinin­g the acceptable limits of fundamenta­l rights solely in the hands of elected officials.”

The Appeal Court upheld almost every aspect of the law, which bans teachers, police officers, jail guards and judges from wearing religious symbols on the job, striking down an exemption for English school boards carved out by a lower court judge. Only a provision banning members of the province’s national assembly from wearing face coverings was judged unconstitu­tional.

Lampron said the ruling finds that the legal criteria for the use of the notwithsta­nding clause was settled by the Supreme Court of Canada in 1988 and the three Appeal Court judges didn’t find a reason to depart from the precedent.

If the case makes its way to the Supreme Court — as many who oppose the law hope it will — Lampron said the court will have to decide whether the “very, very, very unrestrict­ive” criteria for using the notwithsta­nding clause establishe­d in that 1988 ruling, known as Ford v. Quebec, remain pertinent in a sociopolit­ical climate that is very different, especially with regard to minority rights.

Since Quebec used the provision preemptive­ly to shield Bill 21, it has done so again to shield a controvers­ial language law reform.

Saskatchew­an used the provision last fall to protect a bill requiring parental consent when children under 16 want to change their name or the pronouns they use at school, while Ontario used it in 2021 and 2022.

Lampron said that for many years government­s were hesitant to use the provision because they feared it would hurt them politicall­y, but since the taboo was broken, it has being used more frequently.

In its ruling, the Appeal Court panel noted that the notwithsta­nding clause must be renewed every five years — ensuring there is an election between invocation­s — and that in 2022, Ontario repealed a law it had protected with the notwithsta­nding clause in the face of widespread public backlash.

Patrick Taillon, a law professor at Université Laval, said the ruling “is a technical, rational judgment that reminds us of the balance of powers and the compromise­s that were negotiated in our Constituti­on.”

Taillon said the clause is a compromise between the constituti­onal tradition of the United States and that of Britain, where Parliament is supreme.

The clause can be used to prevent judicial overreach, he said, if, for example, the Supreme Court changed its stance on medical assistance in dying or abortion.

Taillon said the limits on wearing religious symbols in the Quebec law only affect a small subset of civil servants.

He presented the scenario of a police officer wearing a Muslim or Jewish symbol arresting someone wearing a symbol of the other faith at a political protest, saying the officer’s neutrality could be called into question.

“Bill 21 is a compromise that isn’t perfect, which isn’t supported unanimousl­y, but which is the subject of a broad consensus,” he said.

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