Provinces insist consent required
By Jordan Press, Postmedia News August 3, 2013
http://www.canada.com/news/Provinces+insist+consent+required/8745421/story.html
Provincial governments are taking a dim view of the federal government's latest argument that it can reform the Senate without provincial consent.
After the Harper government filed a legal brief to the Supreme Court of Canada this week, a spokeswoman for Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne said Ontario's position "is that provincial consent is required" to reform the upper chamber, a sentiment echoed by the government of British Columbia Premier Christy Clark. A spokesman for Clark said "British Columbians should have a say" in what happens to the upper chamber.
Several constitutional experts agree with them, suggesting that the Constitution was not designed to limit the provinces' input into Senate reform.
That view will likely form the basis of the provinces' arguments before Canada's top court, which is being asked to rule on how the Senate can be reformed or abolished.
The federal government, in its submission to the Supreme Court of Canada on Thursday, argued that the Constitution grants more control to Parliament than to the provinces when it comes to changing the Senate.
It also argued that the drafters of the Constitution and the amending formula for it saw provincial involvement in changing the Senate as limited to just "a few matters."
"The argument that the provinces were somehow a negligible partner in this seems a little dubious," said David E. Smith, a noted constitutional expert now at Ryerson University in Toronto. "Do the provinces have a role here in regards to amending? The answer is yes."
The federal government's legal factum also provided a history of Senate reform debates and decisions, and references a Pearsonera decision that set the mandatory retirement age for senators at 75 and a 1981 Supreme Court ruling that determined the federal government had power to make some changes to the Senate.
All were used in the factum to support the federal government's position.
Experts say the past decisions are helpful for context, but they predate the current amending formula for the Constitution, which is the subject of review.
"When the amending formula was created, it was a compromise and one of the big things it (ensured) is that the fundamental law of the land could not be amended without the consent of the provinces," said Ned Franks, a constitutional expert from Queen's University.
Even then, Franks said, the Chretien Liberals gave constitutional veto power to five regions - the Atlantic Provinces, Quebec, Ontario, the Prairies and British Columbia. That means unanimous consent for any change to the Constitution is almost required, which the government doesn't address in its submission, he said.
"Unless it's a very extraordinary circumstance, I see the amending formula as a straitjacket," Franks said.
The Constitution requires the unanimous consent of provinces for changes to the official languages of Canada and the composition of the Supreme Court, while requiring the consent of at least seven provinces representing half the country's population for other changes (the so-called "7/50" formula).
That wording in the Constitution may make it difficult for the federal government to successfully argue that eliminating or reforming the Senate can be done unilaterally by Parliament.
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