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Judges with attitude
National Post
Published: Thursday, February 22, 2007
Canada's judges would do well to remember that "judicial independence"
works in two directions. Yes, the concept rightly prevents politicians
from meddling in judicial decisions. But in return, judges are expected
to avoid intruding on political debates. Regrettably, certain members
of our judiciary seem to have forgotten this fact.
This week, the Canadian Judicial Council (CJC) -- the governing body for
the country's 1,100 federal judges -- publicly denounced recent changes
made in the judicial selection process by the government of Stephen Harper.
In doing so, the CJC may well have overstepped its bounds. By charging
that the Conservatives have placed "in peril" the reputation
of our judicial system, merely by altering the composition of the committees
that advise the minister of justice on suitable appointees to the bench,
the CJC has stumbled into what is clearly political turf. In doing so,
the body arguably has compromised the judicial independence it claims
to be protecting.
No Canadian law nor constitutional clause gives Canada's courts or judges
any say in judicial appointments. There are 12 judicial advisory councils,
established two decades ago and spread across the country, which make
recommendations to the minister of justice on which lawyers might make
suitable judges. But by law, those appointments belong alone to the government
of the day. As such, they are entirely beyond the jurisdiction of the
CJC, and indeed the council is exceeding its mandate by issuing a public
opinion on the makeup of the advisory committees.
The Harper government has not made a host of patronage appointments to
the bench. The few judicial appointments it has made in the past year
have been reasonably evenly distributed among lawyers with Conservative
and Liberal pasts. A case in point: Marshall Rothstein, the Conservatives'
lone appointment to the Supreme Court. While known to oppose judicial
activism--judges making new laws from the bench -- Judge Rothstein is
widely respected for his intellect, legal knowledge and workload.
The Conservatives certainly have not "stacked" the bench with
ideologues, as Liberal MP Michael Ignatieff charged last week. Nor have
they even made Conservative affiliation or ideology a litmus test for
appointment to the councils that recommend the names of new judges.
Since November, 16 of the 33 appointments the Conservatives have made
to the councils (they can make 36 in total) have been persons who have
or have had Tory ties. But there are 84 voting members nationwide. Sixteen
out of 84 hardly represents a usurpation of the process. It is true the
Conservatives have stripped the 12 judges who sit on the councils of an
automatic vote on each recommendation; the judges now vote only in the
case of ties. And the government has added 12 new members from lists of
active-duty police officers. Still, the members appointed by provincial
attorneys general, provincial bar associations and law societies outnumber
the 16 identifiable Tories.
Compare this to the Liberals' record. In 1994, the Liberals tripled the
number of members they appointed directly to the councils from 12 to 36.
And even a cursory examination of those appointed indicates they were
every bit as partisan as the Tories' selections. Yet Canadians never heard
a word of complaint from the CJC or the Canadian Bar Association or any
of the other critics who now claim the legal sky is falling under the
Conservatives. Indeed, none of the same organizations and individuals
commented on the threat to our judiciary's impartiality when it was shown
at the Gomery inquiry, and in subsequent investigations, that more than
two-thirds of the judges appointed by the previous government had been
party members or donated money exclusively to the Liberals.
This revelation -- that the Liberals' judicial appointments, not merely
their appointments to advisory councils, were heavily partisan -- seems
far more likely to undermine the public's confidence in our courts than
anything so far done by the Conservatives. Yet the CJC never felt compelled
to remind the Liberals (as it chose to remind the Tories this week), that
"the judiciary has an important duty toward every person who comes
before the courts to impartially hear and resolve disputes," and
that all those appointed to the bench must have "the ability to maintain
an open mind and put aside preconceived ideas about all issues that come
before the court" irrespective "of political or ideological
considerations." Perhaps the CJC did not mean to enter the political
fray. Yet it is hard to avoid the conclusion that, through its suspiciously
selective display of manufactured outrage, it is advancing a political
message against a Conservative government that its primarily urban, left-leaning
members simply don't like. In other words, it looks like Liberal-appointed
judges asserting the partisan colours of the former political masters
that engineered their own appointments. Even if this is not entirely true,
judges more than anyone, must be acutely aware of the perception created
by such unwarranted public statements. If the CJC truly is committed to
ensuring every Canadian can come before the courts knowing his case will
be heard without partisan taint, then it must not only treat all parties
to litigation equally; it must extend the same equal-handed approach to
governments.
© National Post 2007
Judges should hold their tongues
National Post
Published: Saturday, February 24, 2007
Re: Judges with attitude, editorial, Feb. 22.
Your editorial is entirely correct. The appointment process is none of
the judiciary's constitutional business, and by meddling in the politics
of executive action and parliamentary criticism, the Judicial Council
of Canada has defamed and debased the judicial independence that it purports
to defend. So why would our judges ever so misconceive the limits of their
office and their proper constitutional place? Permit me to make a few
observations in that regard.
First, the post-Charter judiciary has ever more confidently taken upon
itself the task of expanding the reach of law and the state. The business
of growing the state has ievolved two moves: the reconceptualization of
the constitution -- the Charter especially -- from a limitation on state
power to the repository of Canadian values; and, with that, the conjuring
up of constitutional permission to colonize the institutions of public
and private life, by making them comport with state values.
Second, since Canada has been a one party state for most of the last
100 years, the Liberal Party of Canada has both appointed the vast majority
of our judges and conceived and presented itself as the owner of the Charter
and therefore of Canadian values. This has everything to do with the judiciary's
imperialism and triumphalism generally and its conduct here in particular.
Simply, most of our judges share the Liberal party's view of the constitution
and they recoil from anything that would diminish the progress of imprinting
that understanding of the constitution on political and social life.
Woven as it is with the stuff of supposed Canadian values, this unhealthy
constitutional symmetry between party politics and judicial power alone
accounts, in my view, for the ever more chronic inability of federal judges
to shut up.
F.C. De Coste, professor of law, University of Alberta, Edmonton.
© National Post 2007
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