From the CBC:
“Ottawa's use of Emergencies
Act against convoy protests was unreasonable, violated Charter, court rules”
A federal judge says the Liberal
government's use of the Emergencies Act in early 2022 to clear convoy
protesters was unreasonable and infringed on protesters' Charter rights. In
what's already turning into a divisive decision, Federal Court Justice Richard
Mosley wrote that while the protests "reflected an unacceptable breakdown
of public order," the invocation of the Emergencies Act "does not
bear the hallmarks of reasonableness – justification, transparency and
intelligibility." Ultimately, there "was no national emergency
justifying the invocation of the Emergencies Act," he wrote. Deputy Prime
Minister Chrystia Freeland says that she remains ‘convinced’ that invoking the
Emergencies Act in early 2022 was ‘the necessary thing to do.’ A federal judge
ruled Tuesday that the government’s use of the act was unreasonable. The
Federal Court case was argued by two national groups, the Canadian Civil
Liberties Association and the Canadian Constitution Foundation, and two people
whose bank accounts were frozen. They argued Ottawa did not meet the legal
threshold when it invoked the legislation, which had never been used before.
The federal government says it
already plans to appeal. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's government invoked
the Emergencies Act on Feb. 14, 2022 after thousands of protesters angry with
the Liberals' response to the COVID-19 pandemic, including vaccine
requirements, gridlocked downtown Ottawa for nearly a month and blocked border
points elsewhere across the country. The protests gained international
attention for bringing parts of the capital city to a halt. The act gave law
enforcement extraordinary powers to remove and arrest protesters and gave the
government the power to freeze the finances of those connected to the protests.
The temporary emergency powers also gave authorities the ability to commandeer tow
trucks to remove protesters' vehicles from the streets of the capital.
Under the Emergencies Act, a
national emergency only exists if the situation "cannot be effectively
dealt with under any other law of Canada." Further, a public order
emergency can be declared only in response to "an emergency that arises from
threats to the security of Canada that are so serious as to be a national
emergency." The act defers to the
Canadian Security Intelligence Service's definition of such threats — which
includes serious violence against persons or property, espionage, foreign
interference or an intent to overthrow the government by violence. The
government cited the situation in the Alberta border town of Coutts when it
invoked the act. In the early hours of Feb. 14, before the act was invoked,
Mounties in Coutts seized a cache of weapons, body armour and ammunition. Four men are now awaiting trial, accused of
conspiring to murder RCMP officers.
Economic orders infringed on
Charter rights: judge Mosley said
the situation created by the protests across the country did not meet the legal
threshold. "The potential for serious violence, or being unable to
say that there was no potential for serious violence was, of course, a valid
reason for concern," he wrote. "But in my view, it did not satisfy
the test required to invoke the Act, particularly as there was no evidence of a
similar 'hardened cell' elsewhere in the country, only speculation, and the
situation at Coutts had been resolved without violence."
Mosley's decision also examined
one of the most controversial steps taken by the government in response to the
protests — the freezing of participants' bank accounts. "I agree with the
[the government] that the objective was pressing and substantial and that there
was a rational connection between freezing the accounts and the objective, to
stop funding the blockades. However, the measures were not minimally impairing,"
he wrote. The judge said the economic orders infringed on protesters' freedom
of expression "as they were overbroad in their application to persons who
wished to protest but were not engaged in activities likely to lead to a breach
of the peace." He also concluded the economic orders violated protesters'
Charter rights "by permitting unreasonable search and seizure of the
financial information of designated persons and the freezing of their bank and
credit card accounts." The two men
whose bank accounts were frozen also argued that their rights under the
Canadian Bill of Rights were violated, but Mosley disagreed. He also concluded
that the government's actions did not infringe on anyone's right to freedom of
peaceful assembly.
Government plans to appeal Noa
Mendelsohn Aviv, executive director of the CCLA, said their win sets a clear
and critical precedent for future governments. "Emergency is not in the
eye of the beholder. Emergency powers are necessary in extreme circumstances,
but they are also dangerous to democracy," she said. "They should be
used sparingly and carefully. They cannot be used even to address a massive and
disruptive demonstration if that could have been dealt with through regular
policing and laws." Joanna Baron, executive director of the
Canadian Constitution Foundation, said the decision is a "huge vindication
for many people." "[Mosley] also mentioned that economic
disruption cannot form the basis for the invocation of extraordinary measures
such as those contained in the Emergencies Act, which I think would lead to a
very disturbing precedent across Canada, for example in the event of labour
strikes and disruptions," she said.
The government has long argued
the measures it took under the Emergencies Act were targeted, proportional and
temporary. Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland told reporters at a cabinet
retreat in Montreal on Tuesday that the government plans to appeal the
decision, setting up a legal battle that could go all the way to the Supreme
Court of Canada. "We believed we were doing something necessary and
something legal at the time," she told reporters on Tuesday. "That
continues to be my belief today." "This was an extremely tense time.
The safety of individual Canadians was under real threat … Our national
security was under real threat – our national security, including our economic
security," she said Tuesday. Speaking alongside Freeland on Tuesday,
Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc said that the situation at Coutts and
other border crossings helped to inform the government's decision to invoke the
act. "It's not banal when the security services tell you that they found
two pipe bombs and 36,000 rounds of munition and ended up laying criminal
charges as serious as to commit murder," he said. "So the context is
important." Mosley said those findings were "deeply troubling"
but suggested the threats were being dealt with by the police of provincial and
local jurisdiction outside Ottawa. The judge wrote that it may be
"unrealistic" to expect the federal government to wait when the
country is "threatened by serious and dangerous situations," as the
provinces or territories decide whether they have the capacity or authority to
deal with the threat. "However, that is what the Emergencies Act appears
to require." he said.
Rouleau commission reached
different conclusion A mandatory inquiry, led by Commissioner Paul Rouleau,
reviewed the government's use of the Emergencies Act in the fall of 2022 and
came to a different conclusion. After hearing from dozens of witnesses
and reviewing thousands of never-before-seen documents, including cabinet
ministers' text messages, Rouleau concluded the federal government met the
"very high" threshold needed to invoke the Emergencies Act, citing
"a failure in policing and federalism." "Lawful protest
descended into lawlessness, culminating in a national emergency," he
wrote. Justice Minister Arif Virani said the government cited Rouleau's
conclusions when discussing the government's decision to appeal Mosley's
ruling. "[Rouleau's] decision stands at odds with the decision that
was rendered today and I think that is important and that also informs our
decision to appeal," Virani told reporters Tuesday.
The final report out of the
Emergencies Act inquiry found the federal government met the threshold to use
it, as convoy protesters choked downtown Ottawa and blocked border crossings in
early 2022. Still, Commissioner Paul Rouleau calls out police and the Ontario
government for missteps in their responses. CSIS Director David Vigneault
testified that he supported invoking the Emergencies Act, even if he didn't
believe the self-styled Freedom Convoy met his agency's definition of a threat
to national security. In his final
report, Rouleau argued that the definition of "threats to the security of
Canada" in the CSIS Act should be removed from the Emergencies Act. Rouleau,
an Ontario Court of Appeal justice, said he reached his conclusion with some
reluctance. "I do not come to this conclusion easily, as I do not consider
the factual basis for it to be overwhelming," he said in statements he
gave after his report was made public. "Reasonable and informed people
could reach a different conclusion than the one I have arrived at." Mosley
heard arguments in court over three days last April. He wrote that at the
outset of the proceedings, he felt the protests in Ottawa and elsewhere went
"beyond legitimate protest and reflected an unacceptable breakdown of
public order." He said he reached
his decision "with the benefit of hindsight" and a more extensive
record of facts and law than cabinet had available to it when it made its
decision.
Political reaction Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre was
quick to condemn the government and Prime Minister Trudeau personally. "He
caused the crisis by dividing people," he posted on the social media
platform X. "Then he violated Charter rights to illegally suppress
citizens. As PM, I will unite our country for freedom." NDP Leader
Jagmeet Singh said that his party reluctantly supported the invocation of the
act. "The reason we were in that crisis was a direct failure of
Justin Trudeau's leadership and also other levels of government that failed to
act," he said during a caucus meeting in Edmonton. Singh said his
party will watch to see where the appeal goes.
^ This ruling by the Federal
Court shows how ineffective Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his Government was
and is.
The Emergencies Act was created
in 1988 and replaced the War Measures Act.
The War Measures Act was created
in 1914 (during World War 1) and used during World War 1, World War 2 and the
1970 October Crisis.
From October 5-December 28. 1970
Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau (Father of the Current Canadian Prime Minister,
Justin Trudeau) used the War Measures Act to quell the Front de libération du
Québec (FLQ) in Quebec Province.
Pierre Trudeau used the War
Measures Act for the first time in Peace and alienated French-Canadians in Quebec
as well as all Canadians across Canada.
From February 17-23, 2022 Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau invoked the Emergencies Act for the first time in its
history (and during Peacetime) in response to the Freedom Convoy Protest.
On January 23, 2024 a Canadian
Federal Court ruled that the Emergencies Act used by Justin Trudeau was “unreasonable” and “violated
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.” ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/emergencies-act-federal-court-1.7091891
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