Events,
Issues and Concepts of Quebec History
Last
revised: 23 August 2000 | Rights
Claude
Bélanger, Department of History, Marianopolis College Common
use has determined that a right is some sort of an advantage to which one is entitled
and which cannot be denied. It often implies a corresponding duty on the part
of another individual. However, this common definition has no legal standing in
Canada. In a country with British Parliamentary institutions such as Canada, to
exist a right must have some legal foundation. The source of this precept is found
in the principle of the supremacy of Parliament which states that Parliament has
unrestrained powers and that it can. exercise them at will. Thus, it alone can
create a right and none exists which has not been proclaimed as such by a legislative
body. Consequently, "natural rights" are not recognised by the courts
in this country, unless they have been written into law. When a legislature has
not pronounced on a question, advantages enjoyed by individuals are called privileges,
freedoms or liberties. In
Canada, there exists two types of legal rights: some are statutory and others
are constitutional rights. Statutory rights are those that are enacted as a matter
of course and by the ordinary process of legislation: a legislative body (federal
or provincial) decrees that some sort of an advantage is be bestowed on an individual
or a category of individual: (ex. right to vote at age 18, right not to retire
at age 65, right not to be discriminated against by reason of sex, age,
religion, etc.). Often, there has been a tendency to group such rights in a single
document so as to give them, seemingly, more force and prestige. In Canada, for
example, a Canadian Bill of Rights was issued in 1959 and provincial Charters
of Rights have been enacted in every province, including a very extensive one
issued in Quebec in 1974. Statutory rights are advantageous, as they are easy
to create and consequently are numerous. However, they are just as easily amended
and consequently may easily be removed. Constitutional
rights are those that are written in the Constitution and they must be created,
or altered, through the process of constitutional amendment, a process that is
always complex and difficult but, otherwise, provides ironclad guarantees for
the protected rights. Thus there are relatively few such rights; they are inevitably
those that have very broad support among the people and often constitute the foundations
of a modern democratic state (freedom of speech, freedom of the press, right to
council, to a jury etc.). The
original Canadian constitution contained some recognition of linguistic and school
rights in ss. 133 and 93. However, to a large extent, the country functioned with
the principle of Sovereignty of Parliament until the adoption of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms enacted in 1982. Because this enactment was in
contradiction with the tradition of "laissez-faire" regarding rights
from the Canadian past, because of the uncertainty in the application of such
rights in the future and the lack of consensus among the premiers as to which
rights should be protected in 1982, because of remnants of attachment to the British
principle of supremacy of Parliament and because several provinces already had
similar provisions in their charter of rights, the Canadian Charter of Rights
was saddled with a number of restrictions that are most extraordinary: all the
rights listed in the Charter are subjected to possible limits that are acceptable
in a free and democratic society (art. 1) and the rights listed in ss 2, 7-14
and 15 are subjected to a nothwithstanding clause and may thus be suspended by
Parliament or a Legislature for a period of five years. In
Quebec, the provincial Charter of Rights is one of the most extensive in North
America. It has also been somewhat put beyond the grasp of the legislators as
it requires the support of at least 60% of the legislators to be amended.
© 1998 Claude
Bélanger, Marianopolis College |