http://www.law.ualberta.ca/centres/ccs/keywords/?id=61
The Center for Constitutional Studies
The Centre for Constitutional Studies was established
in the fall of 1987 as a result of the collaborative efforts of
the Departments of History and Political Science and the Faculty
of Law at the University of Alberta. The Centre was founded to
encourage and facilitate the interdisciplinary study of constitutional
matters both nationally and internationally.
Supremacy of Parliament
Democracy is known as “government by the people”.
Representative democracy acknowledges that it is impossible to
have every decision made by multitudes of individuals, and it
therefore creates various institutions to make laws and other
decisions required in the day-to-day life of the state. The two
main models of representative democracy – parliamentary
democracy and constitutional democracy – differ in their
institutional design.
In a parliamentary democracy, the Parliament
is supreme and no other governmental institution has the power
to nullify its laws. If a citizen finds a certain law repugnant,
his only option is to mobilize a change in Parliament (for example,
by campaigning in favour of a certain issue or by joining a political
party), such that Parliament changes that law. There is nothing
a citizen can do against a law that is believed to have violated
his rights other than push for political change.
In a constitutional democracy, Parliament is
not omnipotent. Its powers are constrained by the Constitution.
In most constitutional democracies, if a citizen believes that
a certain law violates a certain provision in the Constitution,
she can file an action in a court of law. Courts have the power
of judicial review on the constitutionality of legislation. If
the court finds that the law does indeed violate the Constitution,
it can strike the law down.
Prior to 1982, Parliamentary supremacy reigned in Canada.
The British North America Act set the division of powers between
Parliament and the provincial legislatures where each legislature
was supreme such that, within its jurisdiction, no other institution
had the power to declare its laws unconstitutional. This situation
changed in 1982 with the adoption of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms as part of the Constitution Act, 1982.
- This Act prescribes that “the Constitution of Canada is
the supreme law of Canada” (s.52).
- Thus constitutional supremacy replaced Parliamentary supremacy
in Canada.
- Consequently, if Parliament or any provincial legislatures now
enact a law which violates a section of the Charter, a court has
the power to strike this legislation down.
Some commentators argue however, that since s. 33 of the Charter,
the notwithstanding clause, allows Parliament and the provincial
legislatures to override certain provisions of the Charter, Canadian
legislatures are still partially supreme.
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