BP-283E
THE CONSTITUTION
OF CANADA:
A BRIEF HISTORY OF AMENDING
PROCEDURE DISCUSSIONS
Prepared by:
Daniel Dupras
Law and Government Division
January 1992
TABLE
OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
THE
CHARLOTTETOWN CONFERENCE (1864-1866)
THE
1927 CONFERENCE
THE
STATUTE OF WESTMINSTER (1931)
THE
1935 COMMITTEE
THE
1935 CONFERENCE
THE
1950 CONFERENCE
THE
FULTON FORMULA (1961) AND THE FULTON-FAVREAU FORMULA (1964)
THE
VICTORIA CHARTER (1971)
THE
MOLGAT-MACGUIGAN COMMITTEE (1972)
FEDERAL
PROPOSALS (1975-1976)
PROPOSED
RESOLUTION (1977)
A
TIME FOR ACTION AND BILL C-60
THE
PEPIN-ROBARTS COMMISSION (1979)
THE
1980 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT INITIATIVE
THE
HAYS-JOYAL COMMITTEE (1981)
THE
CONSTITUTION ACT, 1982
THE
MEECH LAKE ACCORD (1987-1990)
THE
BEAUDOIN-EDWARDS COMMITTEE (1991)
CONCLUSION
THE CONSTITUTION OF CANADA:
A BRIEF HISTORY OF AMENDING PROCEDURE DISCUSSIONS
INTRODUCTION
The
constitution of a country is a unique document that influences the validity
and interpretation of all other laws. Subsection 52(1) of the Constitution
Act, 1982 provides for this supremacy of the Constitution of Canada
in the following terms:
52(1)
The Constitution of Canada is the supreme law of Canada, and any
law that is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution
is, to the extent of the inconsistency, of no force or effect.
As
well, subsection 52(2) defines the Constitution of Canada as follows:
52(2)
The Constitution of Canada includes:
(a)
The Canada Act, 1982, including this Act;
(b)
the Acts and orders referred to in the schedule; and
(c)
any amendment to any Act or order referred to in paragraph (a) or
(b).
The
Canada Act, 1982 is the Act passed by the Parliament of the United
Kingdom to give effect to Canada's adoption of the Constitution Act,
1982.(1) The Acts and
orders referred to are constitutional laws and orders in council passed
since 1867 by the Parliament of the United Kingdom and are just as applicable
to Canada as the laws and orders of a constitutional nature passed by
the Parliament of Canada since that date.
From
Confederation on, various constitutional discussions and government reports
have dealt with the constitutional amending procedure. Below is a summary
of events, together with a description of the amending procedures proposed.
THE
CHARLOTTETOWN CONFERENCE (1864-1866)
The
first constitutional conferences were held even before Canada became a
Dominion in 1867. Indeed, the Fathers of Confederation met first in Charlottetown
in September 1864. The Constitution Act, 1867 contained no formula
for amending the Constitution in Canada; consequently, only another Act
by the Parliament of the United Kingdom could amend our fundamental piece
of legislation. This anomaly was corrected in the Constitution Act,
1982, which includes an amending procedure whereby the Parliament
of Canada and the provincial legislatures can amend the Constitution of
Canada without the need for intervention by the Parliament of the United
Kingdom. In 1982, by including this amending procedure in the last United
Kingdom Act to amend the Constitution of Canada, our Constitution was
"patriated." The amending procedure thus enshrined in the Constitution
Act, 1982 will be discussed below.
THE
1927 CONFERENCE
Several
constitutional conferences were required before a domestic constitutional
amending procedure was achieved. During a federal-provincial conference
held in Ottawa from 3 to 10 November 1927, on the initiative of Prime
Minister Mackenzie King, the issue was addressed for the first time. One
topic on the agenda was a proposal by the Honourable Ernest Lapointe,
Minister of Justice, for the patriation of the Constitution and the adoption
of an amending procedure. The Balfour Declaration, made in the context
of the Imperial Conference that had begun in 1926, was then a topical
issue that quite naturally led to discussions on a domestic procedure
for amending the Constitution; as a result, Mackenzie King took the opportunity
to place the issue on the conference agenda.
Under
the proposal made by the Minister of Justice, "ordinary" amendments
to the Constitution of Canada could be made if the majority of the provinces
agreed, while "vital and fundamental" amendments (such as those
affecting the rights of provinces, the rights of minorities or rights
of nationality, language or religion) would require unanimous acceptance
by the provinces. The proposal did not succeed in rallying support among
the conference participants and thus became a dead letter.
THE
STATUTE OF WESTMINSTER (1931)
The
Balfour Declaration dealt with the Dominions of the British Empire and
recognized their equality of status with the United Kingdom in the following
terms:
They
[the United Kingdom and the dominions] are autonomous communities
within the British Empire, co-equal in status, in no way subordinate
to one another in any aspect of their domestic or external affairs,
although united by a common allegiance to the Crown, and freely
associated as members of the British Commonwealth of Nations.
The
Statute of Westminster, passed in 1931 by the Parliament of the
United Kingdom, also resulted from the work of the Imperial Conference
that had begun in 1926. This statute recognized Canada's autonomy except
for the amending procedure, which still depended on the passage of an
Act by the Parliament of the United Kingdom.
On
30 June 1931, following a federal-provincial conference held 7 and
8 April 1931 at Ontario's request, the House of Commons adopted a
resolution (subsequently also adopted by the Senate) that was sent to
the Parliament of the United Kingdom, requesting it to exclude constitutional
Acts passed between 1867 and 1930 from the Statute of Westminster.
The Statute of Westminster provided that the Dominions (including
Canada) could then amend British Acts that still applied to their respective
territories. Since there was no consensus on an amending procedure in
Canada, it was appropriate to make an exception for constitutional Acts
passed between 1867 and 1930.
THE
1935 COMMITTEE
In
January 1935, the House of Commons set up a Special Committee to examine
the need to amend the British North America Act; in its report,
this Committee said nothing about a possible amending procedure.
THE
1935 CONFERENCE
At
a new federal-provincial conference held from 9 to 13 December 1935,
Prime Minister Mackenzie King presented an amending procedure proposal,
which did not gain the assent of the provinces. The proposal provided
that, if Parliament and at least two-thirds of the provinces representing
at least 55% of the population agreed, the Constitution of Canada could
be amended with respect to matters directly affecting the provinces; an
opting-out provision was also included; for more fundamental matters,
unanimity would be indispensable.
Following
this conference, a Continuing Committee on Constitutional Questions was
struck; it developed an amending procedure that was never adopted. According
to this procedure, the Constitution of Canada would have been amended
as follows:
1.
for matters concerning the federal government alone, by an Act of
Parliament;(2)
2.
for matters concerning the federal government and one or more provinces,
but not all the provinces, by an Act of Parliament and with the
assent, expressed by resolution, of the legislatures concerned;
3.
for most matters concerning the federal government and all the provinces,
by an Act of Parliament and with the assent, expressed by resolution,
of the legislatures of two-thirds of the provinces representing
at least 55 per cent of the population of Canada;(3)
4.
for entrenched clauses, by an Act of Parliament and with the assent,
expressed by resolution, of the legislative assemblies of all the
provinces.(4)
Under
section 92(1) of the Constitution Act, 1867, each provincial legislature
had the power to amend the constitution of the province, except for provisions
concerning the office of Lieutenant Governor. Parliament did not enjoy
a similar provision concerning the Constitution of Canada; that is, it
could not by itself amend the provisions dealing exclusively with the
central government and the federal institutions and affecting them only.
Prime Minister Louis Saint-Laurent took steps to correct the situation;
he had the Constitution amended by the Parliament of the United Kingdom
to include section 91(1), which gave Parliament exclusive authority to
amend the Constitution of Canada in accordance with the terms and conditions
set out in that class. It should be noted that section 91(1) and section
92(1) were both repealed by and reincorporated into the Constitution
Act, 1982.
THE
1950 CONFERENCE
Fifteen
years passed before another conference dealt with amending the Constitution.
At this conference, held from 10 to 12 January and 25 to 28 September
1950, it was proposed that the British North America Act be analyzed
and its provisions divided into six classes, as follows:
i)
provisions concerning Parliament exclusively;
ii)
provisions concerning the legislatures exclusively;
iii)
provisions concerning Parliament and one or more, but not all, legislatures;
iv)
provisions concerning Parliament and all the legislatures;
v)
provisions concerning fundamental rights such as education and language;
vi)
provisions to be repealed.
There
would have been a specific amending procedure for each of these divisions.
Negotiations came to a halt when it became clear that it was impossible
to divide the sections into the various classes without first agreeing
on the amending procedure governing each of them. Despite the many proposals
made, it was impossible to reach an agreement.
THE
FULTON FORMULA (1961) AND THE FULTON-FAVREAU FORMULA (1964)
Discussions
were revived 10 years later and led, in 1961, to the "Fulton Formula,"
named for the Minister of Justice of the time. Under this proposal, the
Constitution would have been amended as follows, (with specific cases
to take precedence over more general provisions):
1.
with the consent of Parliament and of all the provinces for provisions
dealing with:
a)
the legislative powers of the legislatures;
b)
the rights and privileges granted or secured by the Constitution
of Canada to the legislature or government of a province;
c)
the assets and property of a province;
d)
the use of English or French;
2.
with the consent of Parliament and of the provinces concerned for
provisions affecting one or more, but not all of the provinces;
3.
with the consent of Parliament and of all the provinces except Newfoundland
in matters of education, or with the consent of Parliament and of
the legislature of the Province of Newfoundland exclusively in matters
of education in that province;
4.
for the other provisions, with the consent of Parliament and of
at least two-thirds of the legislatures representing at least 50
per cent of the population of Canada according to the most recent
census.
In
order to overcome the rigidity of the unanimity clause, the proposal included
the possibility of delegating the legislative power of a province to the
federal government on a matter of exclusive provincial jurisdiction.
Because
of persistent differences of opinion, this proposal met with the same
fate as the previous proposals.
In
1964, the Honourable Guy Favreau, Minister of Justice, took up the Fulton
proposal again and, after changing it slightly, presented a new proposal
for an amending procedure. The new proposal retained the features of the
Fulton Formula and added provisions granting Parliament exclusive power
to make amendments to the Constitution of Canada concerning the executive
government of Canada, the Senate and the House of Commons, except for:
1.
the functions of the Queen and the Governor General in relation
to the Parliament or Government of Canada;
2.
the requirements of the Constitution of Canada that there be a session
of Parliament at least once each year;
3.
the time limit set by the Constitution of Canada for the duration
of the House of Commons, provided, however, that the House of Commons
might in time of real or apprehended war, invasion or insurrection
be continued by the Parliament of Canada if such continuation were
not opposed by the votes of more than one-third of the members of
such House;
4.
the number of Senators by which each province is entitled to be
represented in the Senate;
5.
the qualifications of Senators concerning residence and the requirements
of the Constitution of Canada concerning their appointment by the
Governor General on behalf of the Queen;
6.
the right of a province to a number of members in the House of Commons
that is not less than the number of Senators representing it;
7.
the principles of proportional representation of the provinces in
the House of Commons prescribed by the Constitution of Canada; and
8.
the use of English or French.
In
addition, the provinces would have been given the exclusive right to enact
laws amending their respective constitutions, except for provisions concerning
the office of Lieutenant Governor.
At
the 1964 conference, the proposed procedure received agreement in principle
from all the premiers. However, Jean Lesage, Premier of Quebec, then backtracked
and refused to ratify the agreement, apparently because of popular opposition
to it. As well as calling into question the content of the agreement,
its critics emphasized that during the review and the drafting of the
amendment procedure the public had not been clearly informed of the content
of the discussions or of the agreement.
THE
VICTORIA CHARTER (1971)
Discussions
were revived in 1968 and several conferences were held between 1968 and
1971. At the conference held in Victoria from 14 to 16 June 1971,
the premiers drew up the document known as the Victoria Charter;
it constituted a major constitutional review.
With
regard to the amending procedure, the Victoria Charter provided
that amendments to the Constitution of Canada could be made as follows:
1.
Amendments dealing with matters not specifically referred to elsewhere
could be made with the agreement of:
a)
each province having, at any previous census, more than 25 per
cent of the population of Canada;
b)
at least two of the Atlantic provinces; and
c)
at least two of the Western provinces having, together, at least
50 per cent of the population of those provinces.
2.
Amendments concerning the following matters would also follow this
procedure:
a)
the offices of the Queen, Governor General and Lieutenant Governor:
b)
the requirement that there be a session of Parliament and of the
legislatures at least once each year;
c)
the time limit set for the duration of the House of Commons and
of the legislatures;
d)
the powers of the Senate;
e)
the composition of the Senate;
f)
the right of a province to a number of members in the House of
Commons equal to or greater than the number of Senators representing
it;
g)
the principle of proportional representation of the provinces
in the House of Commons;
h)
the use of English or French.
3.
Amendments dealing with provisions specific to one or more, but
not all, of the provinces could be made with the agreement of Parliament
and of the legislatures concerned.
4.
Amendments to the Constitution of Canada concerning the executive
government of Canada, the Senate or the House of Commons could be
made exclusively by the Parliament of Canada.
5.
Amendments dealing with the constitution of a province could be
part of the exclusive jurisdiction of the province.
The
amending procedure also provided that a resolution for amendment not adopted
by the Senate within 90 days following its adoption by the House of Commons
could be replaced by a second resolution of the House of Commons. The
initiative for a resolution could come from the House of Commons, the
Senate or the legislatures, and each legislative body could revoke its
resolution before it was proclaimed. Despite the agreement among the premiers
at Victoria, the Quebec Cabinet rejected the Victoria Charter.
THE
MOLGAT-MACGUIGAN COMMITTEE (1972)
In
its report to Parliament in 1972, the Special Joint Committee of the Senate
and the House of Commons on the Constitution of Canada stated that the
new Constitution of Canada should adopt the procedure provided for in
the Victoria Charter.
FEDERAL
PROPOSALS (1975-1976)
In
1975, Prime Minister Trudeau launched the constitutional discussions again
on the basis of the amending procedure provided for in the Victoria
Charter, but he did not succeed in obtaining the assent of all the
parties concerned. In 1976, the Prime Minister sent a new message to his
provincial counterparts but received lukewarm responses. First, the Premier
of Alberta indicated partial opposition, demanding unanimity on the expanded
role and powers of the provinces. Subsequently, the Premier of British
Columbia stated that he agreed with the Victoria Charter process,
while the Premier of Alberta indicated that he preferred a return to the
more rigid Fulton-Favreau formula.
PROPOSED
RESOLUTION (1977)
On
19 January 1977, Prime Minister Trudeau sent a letter to his provincial
counterparts and included a proposed resolution addressed to the Queen,
setting out the following constitutional amending procedure.
1.
Unless there was a specific incompatible provision, the Constitution
could be amended if the Senate, the House of Commons and the legislative
assemblies of a majority of the provinces adopted a resolution to
that effect. This majority would have to include:
a)
each province whose population had, at any time prior to the adoption,
at least 25 per cent of the population of Canada;
b)
at least two of the Atlantic provinces;
c)
at least two of the Western provinces, provided that the consenting
provinces had at least 50 per cent of the population of those
provinces.
2.
This amending procedure rule would apply to provisions concerning
the following matters in particular:
a)
the offices of the Queen, Governor General and Lieutenant Governor:
b)
the requirement that there be a session of Parliament and of the
legislatures at least once each year;
c)
the time limit set for the duration of the House of Commons and
of the provincial legislatures;
d)
the power of the Senate;
e)
the number of Senators to which each province is entitled to be
represented in the Senate and the qualifications of Senators concerning
residence;
f)
the right of a province to be represented in the House of Commons
by a number of members at least as great as the number of its
Senators;
g)
the principle of proportional representation of the provinces
in the House of Commons;
h)
the use of English and French.
3.
For provisions that apply to one or more provinces, an amendment
to the Constitution could be adopted by approval of the Senate,
the House of Commons and the legislative assemblies of the provinces
concerned.
4.
Any amendment to the Constitution of Canada concerning the executive
power of Canada, the Senate and the House of Commons would require
the approval of Parliament alone.
In
addition, under this amendment procedure, the Senate would have had only
a 90-day suspensive veto on amendments.
As
a result of widespread opposition, the proposal was not pursued.
A
TIME FOR ACTION AND BILL C-60
In
June 1978, the federal government published a white paper entitled A
Time for Action, in which it proposed that the Constitution of Canada
be renewed in two stages.
First,
the federal government, after consultation with the provinces, would amend
the Constitution with respect to those matters that could be altered by
the federal government acting alone. Second, the federal government and
the provinces would try to reach an agreement on the subjects requiring
intervention by the Parliament of the United Kingdom, for example the
distribution of powers.
Also
in 1978, the federal government published another study dealing directly
with the amending procedure of the Constitution of Canada.
After
briefly summarizing the discussions to date on this topic, the document
set out four possible procedures for amending the Constitution:
1.
the Fulton-Favreau formula;
2.
the formula contained in the Victoria Charter;
3.
the formula contained in the Victoria Charter combined with
referendums;
4.
use of referendums alone.
Also
in 1978, the Prime Minister tabled Bill C-60, An Act amending the
Constitution, in the House of Commons. Because of the opposition it raised,
the bill was referred to the Supreme Court of Canada.(5)
The Supreme Court concluded that the power granted to Parliament by class
1 of section 91 of the Constitution Act, 1867 concerned only matters
of exclusive federal jurisdiction. Since several of the amendments proposed
by Bill C-60 exceeded this limitation, the government did not pursue
the bill.
THE
PEPIN-ROBARTS COMMISSION (1979)
The
Task Force on Canadian Unity tabled its report in January 1979 and recommended
adoption of an amending procedure for the Constitution of Canada. The
proposed amending procedure restated the proposal in the Victoria Charter.
It provided that the Constitution would be amended by the passage, by
majority vote, of an Act by the House of Commons and the Council of the
Federation(6) and by the ratification
of this Act by a Canada-wide referendum with majorities in each of the
four regions constituted by the Atlantic provinces; Quebec; Ontario; and
the Western provinces and the territories.(7)
This procedure would have applied to the provisions of the Constitution
dealing with:
1.
the distribution of legislative powers;
2.
the constitution of the two Houses of Parliament, the existence
and composition of the Supreme Court of Canada and the method of
appointing and revoking the appointments of Supreme Court justices;
3.
the offices of Governor General and Lieutenant Governor;
4.
the protected list of fundamental rights;
5.
protected language rights; and
6.
the amending procedure.
In
accordance with the recommendations of this report, Parliament would have
been given the right to amend other sections of the Constitution except
those dealing with the constitutions of the provinces, which could be
amended only by the legislative assembly of the province concerned.
THE
1980 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT INITIATIVE
Following
the referendum held in Quebec on 20 May 1980, in which a majority
of persons refused to give the government of that province a mandate to
negotiate sovereignty association between Quebec and the rest of Canada,
discussions were revived on 9 June; the purpose was to allow the
various parties concerned to reach an agreement, particularly on patriation
of the Constitution and an amending procedure.
In
October 1980, a proposed resolution that included an amending procedure
was tabled in the House of Commons; its objective was to allow the federal
government to proceed unilaterally, in view of the lack of success of
previous discussions. This resolution included the following mechanism
as an amending procedure.
1.
The Constitution of Canada could be amended if there was a resolution:
a)
of Parliament;
b)
of each province having, or ever having had, at least 25 per cent
of the population of Canada;
c)
of at least two of the Atlantic provinces representing at least
50 per cent of the population of those provinces; and
d)
of at least two of the Western provinces representing at least
50 per cent of the population of those provinces.
2.
The Constitution of Canada could be amended if a national referendum
approved the amendment as follows:
a)
the majority of electors approved the amendment; and
b)
the amendment was approved by the majority of the electors in
each of the provinces from which a resolution would be required
to amend the Constitution in accordance with the requirements
of the preceding paragraph.
3.
The provisions of the Constitution of Canada applicable to certain
provinces could be amended only by resolutions of Parliament and
of the provinces concerned.
4.
Amendment of the Constitution would be part of the exclusive jurisdiction
of Parliament in matters concerning the executive power of the federal
government, the Senate and the House of Commons
5.
Amendment of the constitution of a province would be part of the
exclusive jurisdiction of the province concerned.
It
should be noted that a resolution could be made by either of the two Houses
of Parliament or a legislature, while the initiative for holding a referendum
could come only from the Senate or the House of Commons.
In
view of the opposition to this proposal, doubts expressed about the legality
of the procedure and opinions given by the courts of appeal of Quebec,
Manitoba and Newfoundland, the issue went to the Supreme Court of Canada.
On 28 September 1981, the Supreme Court reached a majority conclusion
that the federal initiative was legal; however, it expressed reservations
about its legitimacy on the ground that it would run counter to the conventions
and the spirit of the federal system.(8)
THE
HAYS-JOYAL COMMITTEE (1981)
In
the meantime, the Special Joint Committee of the Senate and the House
of Commons on the Constitution of Canada, chaired by Senator Harry Hays
and Member of Parliament Serge Joyal, tabled its report on 13 February
1981. It recommended that the general rule of the amending procedure be
that contained in the 1977 proposed resolution. However, the resolutions
of the provincial legislative assemblies, if not made within 12 months
of the resolutions of each of the Houses of Parliament, might be replaced
by a referendum. A referendum would be considered adopted if it was approved
by a national majority and a majority in the provinces from which approval
resolutions were required. The idea of holding a referendum to overcome
the difficulty of having resolutions adopted by the provincial legislative
assemblies had been mentioned on several occasions by Prime Minister Trudeau.
THE
CONSTITUTION ACT, 1982
A
new federal-provincial conference was called. Prime Minister Trudeau once
again proposed a procedure similar to the one provided for in the Victoria
Charter. All the provinces except Ontario and New Brunswick supported
the "Vancouver formula," under which the Constitution could
be amended with the agreement of two-thirds of the provinces representing
at least 50% of the population. This proposal also contained a provision
for opting out with full compensation. During final negotiations, however,
compensation was dropped for all matters except those related to culture
and language. Quebec refused to be a party to this agreement, which, after
slight changes had been made, became the Constitution Act, 1982.
The Constitution Act, 1982 included the adoption of the following
amending procedure.
The
general amending formula
(sections 38, 39, 40 and 42)
Section
38 of the Act provides that the Constitution of Canada may be amended,
if there is no specific provision to the contrary, by resolutions
of the Senate and House of Commons and two-thirds of the provinces
(seven) having at least 50% of the population of all the provinces
combined. The territories have no role in the amending process.
A province that does not agree with an amendment affecting provincial
legislative powers, or propriety rights, or other privileges, can
dissent from it, also by resolution. In that case, the amendment
has no effect within that province. After the last necessary resolution
is passed, the Governor General can make the amendment by proclamation.
Section
39 sets out the time frames within which an amendment may be made.
All of the required resolutions must be passed, and the proclamation
issued, within three years from the adoption of the resolution which
initiates the amending process. Conversely, an amendment cannot
be proclaimed until a year after the first resolution has been passed
unless all the provinces have dealt with the amendment by either
a resolution of assent or a resolution of dissent.
Section
40 provides that, where an amendment transfers provincial legislative
powers relating to education or culture to Parliament, any dissenting
province shall receive reasonable compensation.
Section
42 specifies that amendments with respect to the following matters
in particular must be made using the general amending formula:
1.
the principle of proportional representation of the provinces
in the House of Commons;
2.
the powers of the Senate and the method of selecting Senators;
3.
the number of Senators representing a province and the residence
qualifications of Senators;
4.
the Supreme Court of Canada (except for its composition);
5.
the extension of existing provinces into the territories; and
6.
the establishment of new provinces.
Amendment
requiring unanimity (Section 41)
Unanimity,
expressed by resolution of Parliament and of all the legislatures,
is required in the following matters:
1.
the offices of the Queen, Governor General and Lieutenant Governor;
2.
the right of a province to a number of members in the House of
Commons not less than the number of Senators by which the province
is entitled to be represented;
3.
the use of English and French (subject to the provision relating
to the parties concerned);
4.
the composition of the Supreme Court; and
5.
amendment to the procedure for amending the Constitution.
Amendment
of provisions relating to some but not all provinces (Section
43)
The
provisions applicable only to certain provinces may be amended with
the agreement of Parliament and the legislatures concerned.
In
particular, this procedure applies to:
1.
alterations to boundaries between the provinces;
2.
amendments to provisions relating to the use of English and French
within a province.
Amendment
by Parliament (Section 44)
Parliament
may exclusively amend the Constitution of Canada in relation to
the executive government of Canada or the Senate and House of Commons.
Amendment
by provincial legislatures (Section 45)
Subject
to the provisions requiring unanimity, each province may exclusively
amend the constitution of that province.
THE
MEECH LAKE ACCORD (1987-1990)
In
a 1984 speech, the Honourable Brian Mulroney made a commitment to breathe
new life into federalism and persuade the Quebec National Assembly to
sign the Constitution.
In
1986, Robert Bourassa's government set out the five minimum conditions
to be met if Quebec were to sign the Constitution. One of these conditions
was that Quebec would have a veto over the constitutional amending procedure.
The
Meech Lake-Langevin Accord of 30 April 1987 would have made the following
amendments to the amending procedure in the Constitution Act, 1982:
1.
The provinces would have been eligible for compensation in all cases
where an amendment to the Constitution had the effect of transferring
an area of provincial jurisdiction to the federal government; the
present Constitution provides for the right to compensation only
in matters of education and culture.
2.
The classes of subjects requiring unanimity would have been expanded
to include the following:
a)
the offices of the Queen, Governor General and Lieutenant Governor:
b)
the powers of the Senate and the method of selecting Senators;
c)
the number of Senators for a province and the residence qualifications
of Senators;
d)
the right of a province to a number of members in the House of
Commons at least equal to the number of its Senators;
e)
the principle of proportional representation of the provinces
in the House of Commons;
f)
the use of English and French;
g)
the Supreme Court of Canada;
h)
the extension of existing provinces into the territories;
i)
the establishment of a new province; and
j)
amendment of the amending procedure.
For
the matters referred to in (a), (d), (f) and (j), unanimity is already
required by the Constitution Act, 1982; the matters referred to
in (b), (c), (e), (g), (h) and (i) would have been added to them. With
regard to the Supreme Court, only amendments relating to its composition
require unanimity under the Constitution Act, 1982.
The
Meech Lake Accord had to be adopted by the two Houses of Parliament
and all the provincial legislatures in order to come into force. The House
of Commons adopted the Accord a first time on 25 October 1987, and
a second time on 22 June 1988 in order to overcome the Senate's refusal
to adopt the Accord in its entirety.(9)
From
23 June 1987, the date of the Quebec National Assembly's first resolution
approving the Accord, the other provinces had three years in which to
approve it.
In
fact, only one province, Manitoba, did not adopt the Accord at some time.
The Legislative Assembly of Newfoundland, which had adopted a resolution
approving the Accord, later rescinded its approval by a second resolution.(10)
Shortly
before the three-year time limit expired, it became increasingly likely
that the Accord would not be adopted by all the legislative assemblies
within the time limit. Prime Minister Mulroney therefore called a new
constitutional conference, which was held in early June 1990.
On
9 June 1990, the first ministers signed an agreement under the terms
of which the premiers of the three provinces that had still to ratify
the Accord prior to 23 June 1990 (New Brunswick, Newfoundland and
Manitoba) agreed to submit it to their respective legislative assemblies
and to do everything possible for a decision to be made before 23 June
1990. Following this agreement, New Brunswick adopted the Accord within
the time limit. The Legislative Assembly of Manitoba was unable to make
a decision on the Accord; one of its members refused to give his consent
to a change in that Assembly's procedure that might have enabled it to
reach a decision by 23 June.(11)
Since,
technically, the Accord could not be adopted by the Manitoba government,
the Legislative Assembly of Newfoundland decided that it would not be
appropriate for it to vote on the matter.
THE
BEAUDOIN-EDWARDS COMMITTEE (1991)
On
the assumption that failure to adopt the Meech Lake Accord had been largely
due to the amending procedure contained in the Constitution Act, 1982,
the government proposed to Parliament that a Special Joint Committee of
the Senate and the House of Commons be set up which would be responsible
for holding wide-ranging consultations with Canadians and inquiring into
and reporting on a procedure for amending the Constitution of Canada.
After
holding hearings in all parts of Canada, on 20 June 1991 the Committee
produced a report in which it recommended to Parliament that the constitutional
amending procedure be changed as follows.
1.
The amending procedure should be changed to adopt the procedure
already proposed in the Victoria Charter as a general rule for amendment,
and the time limit for ratification reduced to two years.
2.
The unanimity rule should be limited to the following matters:
a)
the use of English and French, including the rights of linguistic
minorities, provided for in paragraph 41(c) of the Constitution
Act, 1982;
b)
property rights of the provinces;
c)
the offices of the Queen, Governor General and Lieutenant Governor.
3.
The provisions contained in section 43, 44 and 45 of the Constitution
Act, 1982 should remain unchanged.
In
addition, in accordance with other recommendations, no amendment to the
Constitution that would affect the rights of aboriginal people should
be made without the consent of those people. Similarly, any amendment
to the boundaries of the provinces or territories would require the agreement
of the federal government and the provinces or territories concerned.
Provinces could be created in the territories if a federal law were passed
ratifying an agreement to that effect between the federal government and
the territories.
The
report of the Beaudoin-Edwards Committee also noted that the proposed
amending procedure should be adopted only as part of more comprehensive
reform that would include Senate reform.
CONCLUSION
As
can be seen, most of the formulas proposed are variations on the Fulton-Favreau
formula, based on the equality of provinces, and the Victoria Charter,
based on the equality of the regions. Depending on the degree of importance
attached to the provinces and their autonomy during the political ups
and downs of the Canadian federation, each of these options has been promoted
at one time or another.
In
the past, it was proposed that lack of approval by the provinces might
be circumvented by having the population take part in the procedure by
means of a referendum. Recently, this idea has regained popularity as
a result of popular pressure for increased public participation in the
process. Using a referendum in such a way, however, would itself first
require an amendment to the amending formula and the consent of all provinces.
(1)
Canada's first Constitution, the British North America Act, 1867,
30-31 Victoria, c 3 (UK) and the Acts amending it, were always Acts of
the Parliament of the United Kingdom. The British North America Act
was passed on 29 March 1867 and come into force on 1 July 1867. Since
1982, each constitutional Act has been referred to as the "Constitution
Act," followed by the year of passage. Thus, the British North
America Act of 1867 is now referred to as the Constitution Act,
1867.
(2)
This covered the office of Governor General, the offices of Lieutenant
Governor; the constitution of the Privy Council; the constitution, composition
and powers of the Senate, except for the representation of the provinces
in the Senate; the constitution, composition and powers of the House of
Commons, except for representation in the House of Commons; and the Treasury.
(3)
If, however, the Act dealt with matters falling into classes 13 (property
and civil rights) or 16 (matters of a local or private nature in a province)
of section 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867, the legislature of a province
whose legislative assembly had not approved or was not deemed to have
approved that Act in accordance with the provisions of this section and
who had expressed its dissent in a resolution could have continued to
legislate exclusively on the matters that were the subject of the Act.
(4)
The scope of this section was all matters falling under sections 9 (declaration
of executive power in the Queen), 21 (number of Senators), 22 (representation
of the provinces in the Senate), 51 and 51A (representation in the House
of Commons); under subsections 4, 5, 8, 12, 14 and 15 of section 92 (legislative
powers of the provinces); under section 93 and the corresponding provisions
of various Acts of Union (education); and under section 133 and
the corresponding provision of the Manitoba Act, 1870 (use of the
English and French languages).
(5)
Re British North America Act and the Federal Senate (1979), 30 NR
271.
(6)
In accordance with the recommendations contained in the report, the Senate
would have been replaced by a Council of the Federation.
(7)
Any province that later acquired at least 25% of the population of Canada
would automatically have become a separate region.
(8)
Re: Resolution to Amend the Constitution, [1981] 1 SCR 753.
(9)
In fact, on 21 April 1988, the Senate adopted a resolution adopting
the Accord after making nine amendments to it. Since, under section 47
of the Constitution Act, 1982, the Senate has only a suspensive
veto of 180 days on amendments to the Constitution, the House of Commons
adopted a second resolution approving the Accord in order to circumvent
the Senate's refusal.
(10)
Subsection 46(2) of the Constitution Act, 1982 provides that a
legislative assembly may revoke a prior resolution approving an agreement.
(11)
The rules of procedure of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba did not
allow it to make a decision on the agreement unless a notice regarding
it was given a certain number of days in advance. This notice period made
it impossible to hold a debate on the Accord before 23 June 1990
unless all the members of the Assembly agreed to consider the matter before
the expiry of the notice period. A single member of the Assembly, Elijah
Harper, refused to give his consent; this had the effect of paralysing
the entire process.
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