Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

British Royal Succession Law Will Be Contested In Quebec Court Starting Monday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2015 12:12 PM
    MONTREAL — The birth of Prince George before his sister Charlotte averted the need for a major change in British tradition.
     
    But the recent law that changed the rules of royal succession will be challenged in Quebec court beginning Monday, and could have political consequences in Canada.
     
    The challenge could even force Ottawa to undertake a round of constitutional negotiations, say the lawyers behind the suit.
     
    In 2011 — while the world wondered if the firstborn of royal couple William and Kate would be a boy or a girl — the leaders of the 16 Commonwealth countries agreed to change the succession rules to allow a girl, if she was the eldest, to become queen.
     
    Before the change, she would have been passed over in favour of her brother.
     
    The Harper government implemented the change by a simple federal law in 2013.
     
    According to Patrick Taillon and Genevieve Motard, law professors at the University of Laval, this was a change to Canada's constitution that should have required the consent of the provinces, which the prime minister never sought.
     
    Now, Taillon and Motard are aiming to have the law on royal succession declared unconstitutional.
     
    The professors have the support of Quebec's Attorney General and — improbably — a monarchist league, the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust.
     
    The government argues that the modification made by the British Parliament concerning the monarchy applies automatically under Canadian law — Ottawa had only to pass a law giving "assent," with no need for a constitutional change.
     
    Those who are contesting the law say the British Parliament lost its right to legislate for Canada with the repatriation of the Constitution in 1982.
     
    In an interview, Taillon said the intention of the suit is primarily "so that the Canadian Constitution is respected by the federal government."
     
    If the law is invalidated by the court, the federal government will be faced with a choice: refuse to touch the Constitution and default on Canada's obligations to the Commonwealth, or open the Pandora's box of constitutional negotiations, where the provinces could bring their demands to the table.
     
    According to Taillon, if the law is invalidated it could also change Quebec's balance of power on the constitutional front.
     
    Because of obligations to the Commonwealth, the federal government would have no choice but to listen to provincial demands, unlike in the past when he says Harper abandoned Senate reform rather than seek the approval of the provinces.
     
    "In this case, he can't say 'we won't act' because he's involved with the other countries," Taillon said, while admitting that the international consequences of doing so might not be more severe than when Canada withdrew from the Kyoto protocol.
     
    He says the group has "nothing against the essence of the reform," referring to changing the law to allow a woman to inherit the crown.
     
    The case is expected to last two weeks in Quebec Superior Court.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    10 Per Cent Of Those Surveyed Plan To Max Out New Tfsa Annual Limit: CIBC Poll

    10 Per Cent Of Those Surveyed Plan To Max Out New Tfsa Annual Limit: CIBC Poll
    TORONTO — Ten per cent of Canadians surveyed in a new poll say they typically contribute the maximum amount to their Tax-Free Savings Account and will now invest $10,000.

    10 Per Cent Of Those Surveyed Plan To Max Out New Tfsa Annual Limit: CIBC Poll

    Ottawa To Explore Ways To Give People Option To Boost Canada Pension Plan

    Ottawa To Explore Ways To Give People Option To Boost Canada Pension Plan
    OTTAWA — The Harper government says it will explore giving people the option to pump more of their earnings into the Canada Pension Plan to boost their retirement savings.

    Ottawa To Explore Ways To Give People Option To Boost Canada Pension Plan

    Canada Post And Hamilton In Court Over Placement Of Large Community Mailboxes

    Canada Post And Hamilton In Court Over Placement Of Large Community Mailboxes
    HAMILTON — Canada Post and the City of Hamilton are off to court this afternoon in a fight over the placement of large community mailboxes.

    Canada Post And Hamilton In Court Over Placement Of Large Community Mailboxes

    Temperature Plunge Leaves Ontario Vineyards Scrambling To Prevent Crop Damage

    Temperature Plunge Leaves Ontario Vineyards Scrambling To Prevent Crop Damage
    TORONTO — Vineyard owners in parts of southern Ontario are assessing the damage from a record-breaking plunge into cold weather that some growers say has devastated their grape crops.

    Temperature Plunge Leaves Ontario Vineyards Scrambling To Prevent Crop Damage

    West Vancouver Youth Program Worker, Pooria Mohebbi, Charged In Sexual Assaults On Teen Girl

    West Vancouver Youth Program Worker,  Pooria Mohebbi, Charged In Sexual Assaults On Teen Girl
    Investigators say two charges of sexual assault and one charge of breach of recognizance have been approved against 28-year-old Pooria Mohebbi.

    West Vancouver Youth Program Worker, Pooria Mohebbi, Charged In Sexual Assaults On Teen Girl

    Three Men Seriously Injured When House Explodes In Vancouver Island Community

    COURTENAY, B.C. — RCMP say they have evidence to suggest that illegal drug production caused a house to explode in the Vancouver Island community of Courtenay.

    Three Men Seriously Injured When House Explodes In Vancouver Island Community