Are there inalienable rights in Canada?

Pulat Yunusov

We in Canada like to think of ourselves as free. We also like to think we have rights. The police can’t throw us in jail for our political views. And if they do throw us in jail for any reason, the police must let us call a lawyer. A part of Canada’s constitution, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guarantees our rights and freedoms. But the constitutional rights and freedoms such as freedom of expression, a right against arbitrary detention or imprisonment, and even our right to life, liberty and security, are not absolute. The Charter leaves loopholes for the federal Parliament, provincial legislatures, or even judges to limit or take away any rights or freedoms. There are no inalienable rights in Canada.

A legal right is a claim to a benefit. The law sets legal rights, and the courts will enforce them if no one else will. When you sign a contract to lease an apartment in exchange for rent, your tenant has a right to use the apartment, and you have a right to some of the tenant’s money. Your right is always someone else’s duty, which is either to give up the benefit you claim or to let you claim the benefit freely. You can also have rights against the government. For example, habeas corpus is a right to see a judge if the police arrest you. Freedoms are like rights but they are more about enjoying benefits you already have, such as speech or movement. Still, the flip side of every freedom is someone’s duty to respect it. For example, if you have a freedom of religion, the government may not ban your faith.

But rights and freedoms in our relations with the government are tricky because the government  is a sovereign. It means that within its geographic borders the government writes the law. What good is a right if the government can scrap it? That’s where a constitution comes into play. It’s a superlaw that tells the government what laws it can and cannot write. And it’s very difficult for the government to change the constitution. The Canadian Charter is the part of our constitution that orders the government to respect certain human rights. If a provincial or the federal legislature passes a law infringing on our Charter right, the courts can strike that law from the books. It will have no force and effect. That way the Charter protects us from the government.

Even democracies need this protection to stop majorities from oppressing minorities. For example, our legal tradition has very good reasons for protecting some rights of the criminally accused. Only a minority of the total population will ever need these rights. Whether justified or baseless, a fear of crime can bring a party that wants to do away with these rights to power. In theory, our Charter will always stop the Parliament from touching the rights of the criminally accused. Before the Charter, the Parliament could throw out the presumption of innocence or the law against self-incrimination. A constitution can also protect racial, gender, or other minorities from discrimination. We can be sure of our human rights only when they are safe from the majority and the government it elects.

The Charter promises us this safety, but it doesn’t really deliver. There are several loopholes in the Charter that let the federal parliament, provincial legislatures, or the courts take away rights. First, the notwithstanding clause in s. 33 empowers legislatures to suspend fundamental freedoms (s. 2) and legal (ss. 7-14) and equality (s. 15) rights. Perhaps for fear of the ballot box, legislatures tried it for real only very few times. But if the government can suspend the rights, they are not inalienable.

Second, the most obvious limitation on all rights and freedoms in the Charter is in s. 1. It basically says that sometimes the Charter will not protect our rights. Suppose the Parliament passes a law that bans newspapers in a certain language. If the government can justify this law as reasonable “in a free and democratic society,” it can get away with it under s. 1. Who decides what’s reasonable and what’s free and democratic? Ultimately, it’s the nine people on the Supreme Court of Canada. Sometimes a s. 1 justification is a very hard task, but a right or freedom is guaranteed only if it’s legally certain, not if it’s probable or very likely. So the government can strip anyone of any Charter right with the consent of the Supreme Court.

Third, the courts decide what each right and freedom in Canada actually means. For example, s. 7 allows the government to deprive anyone of “the right to life, liberty, and security of the person” only in accordance with “the principles of fundamental justice.” The Supreme Court decides what these principles are. Next, the Charter often defines rights using the principle of “reasonableness,” which is really a code word for letting the courts fill in the details. See, for example, the right against “unreasonable search” (s. 8), the right to be tried within a “reasonable time” (s. 11(b)), etc. When the police breach our Charter rights to obtain evidence against us in a criminal investigation, we have a right to have it excluded from our trial—but only if “the admission of it in the proceedings would bring the administration of justice into disrepute” (s. 24(2)). Again, the courts decide what that means by applying factors laid down by the Supreme Court.

Finally, if the government breaches your Charter rights, the courts decide what compensation you get if any. It is little comfort to you and little deterrent to the government if the courts merely declare government action unconstitutional. Denied or insufficient remedies gut Charter rights and freedoms. As the recent case of Omar Khadr has shown, the Supreme Court can deny a meaningful remedy even for breaches of the most basic rights such as a right to fundamental justice in s. 7. Most Canadians don’t seem to like Omar Khadr or his family, so the majority is clearly not on his side. The Supreme Court didn’t say that it let the government off the legal hook because of the views of the majority of Canadians. But these views possibly encouraged the government when it violated Khadr’s Charter rights or denied him the requested remedy. What is the value of rights that depend on politics?

One can argue that these cases are extreme and that limits on our Charter rights are fine because we trust our government. After all we elect it. But consider this. First, majorities elect the government, and how certain are you what the majority will be like 20 years from now? Are you going to be in that majority? Do you want to entrust your most basic human rights to a majority? Second, even election rights in the Charter are not inalienable. Mix a national emergency with the right people on the Supreme Court (appointed by the Prime Minister; no Parliament’s consent required), and the words “reasonable,” “free,” and “democratic” in section 1 of the Canadian Charter can have a very different meaning.

The word “inalienable” expresses the idea of rights that the law can never let anyone take. An inalienable right is yours by the fact of your membership in the human species. No government or person gave you this right, so they can never take it away. It is yours by birth. It recognizes your inherent value as a human being regardless of who you are, what you did, or what you think. Very few rights can be inalienable but those that can are truly fundamental: a right to a fair trial, freedom of speech, habeas corpus. The US Declaration of Independence speaks of “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness” as inalienable rights. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights recognizes “the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family.”

Our Charter does not have the word “inalienable,” neither in letter nor in spirit. It uses other words. But social conditions change, and what’s not “reasonable,” “free,” or “democratic” today can become such in the future. There is a fully legal path to breaches of any rights in Canada. It doesn’t necessarily mean it’s possible politically, socially, or economically, but legally our rights are uncertain. A constitution that fails to protect minorities from the majority’s changing moods does not guarantee rights. The loopholes in the Charter show that we have rights and freedoms only as long as the government and the Supreme Court let us. Rights and freedoms in Canada do not inherently belong to us as human beings but are revocable gifts from the government and the courts. And if we can’t change our Charter, we must at least hold our government to account especially strictly when it comes to human rights.

6 Comments on "Are there inalienable rights in Canada?"

  1. Shawn Heslip | February 23, 2010 at 7:12 am |

    Just as George Carlin taught us years ago “you have no rights”.This country is finished.

  2. Thanks, nicely laid out. So if there is no ‘remedy’ then the right didn’t exist in the first place.

    We’re in trouble.

  3. I think you are wrestling with the same question that has confounded liberal democratic philosophers for centuries. You’ve outlined the problem of having rights subject to majority whim but you haven’t really paid much attention to the problems of full judicial supremacy either–ie decisions made by a very few that have an impact on society at large. I’m pretty big on individual liberty but even I wouldn’t want to see judicial supremacy taken to its extreme.

    Personally I think Canada has struck a good balance. Without s. 1 the Charter would be a ridiculous document as few or no rights can be absolute. I think if you went through the jurisprudence you would see a number of cases where the outcome would be simply ludicrous if the court could not resort to s. 1. The Oakes test is a great statement of when the public interest can justifiably supercedes the private. I don’t think I could have put it better myself.

    S. 33 is definitely a problem but I think it is a good safety valve to have and we’ve done a good job of creating a political culture in which its use is ‘off limits’. Also if it weren’t for s. 33 we probably wouldn’t have had a Charter to being with.

    As for the courts making the decisions about what these words mean… well someone has to. If not the courts who? The person whose right is allegedly being infringed? We can pretty well guess what they’re gonna say. The government or legislature? What is the point of a ‘right’ if the people accused of infringing it are the ones deciding if its a right? If you have a better suggestion of who should make this decision I’m all ears.

    At the end of the day there is no simple answer and no system is going to be perfect. Subject to a few changes I’d like to see (both in terms of interpretation and the text of the Charter itself) I think we’ve struck a good balance.

  4. Luitpoldt Drake | June 13, 2010 at 2:29 pm |

    No theory is more misleading for respecting rights than to assume that enforcing them amounts to nothing more than judicial legislation against majority legislation. This inaccurately pretends that the controlling language of rights simply drops out of the analysis, and that nothing remains but the opposing subjectivities of judges on the one side and legislatures on the other. Dworkin has shown in detail how inaccurate this picture is, but significantly, Dworkin is routinely ignored in Canadian law schools, where a solid understanding of his position would undercut the hatred of rights essential to the entire Canadian anti-rights ideology.

    If Canada can’t outgrow its statist origins and learn to respect individual autonomy, then why bother pretending to try with a weakly designed and interpreted Charter? “C’mon now lads, Lord Selkirk’s come into the room; take your caps off and stand up straight!” — How are you ever going to graft Thomas Paine, Thomas Jefferson, Patrick Henry, and James Madison onto that?

  5. Well I find this article to be well written and well thought out, I don’t agree with KC’s generalizations in defense of the Charter’s flaws.

    We must know that it was fashioned by a Liberal government and it needs to be revised.

    I like the last part of your article:

    “…if we can’t change our Charter, we must at least hold our government to account especially strictly when it comes to human rights.”

    That sums it up succinctly!

    Of course I’m going through my own Charter abuse – just started year NINE this last Sunday.

    Find out more at my protest website – that has been online – without interruption – since April 2005:

    http://www.spyimplants.webs.com

    Here is a protest discussion I created about the matter – this opens to page 17:

    http://www.bloggingtories.ca/forums/topic1064-240.html

    I have the medical evidence but I cannot find a serious lawyer!

  6. Lex Quadruplator | December 4, 2013 at 5:55 am |

    As stated within the charter itself, the charter only applies to the government itself. It is only binding to you if you are a government agent or performing a government function. Not sure why this is not being mentioned?

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