New Stuff

A new podcast and a forthcoming case comment

A quick announcement for blog readers about two new outputs (an ugly, but usefully generic word) from me.

First: the Institute for Liberal Studies kindly invited me to their podcast, The Curious Task, to speak about the “notwithstanding clause”. I have of course written about it quite a bit, both recently and earlier, but if you prefer getting my rants in spoken form, you can get them here or on the podcast player of your choice.

Second, the Constitutional Forum will publish my comment on Fair Voting BC v Canada (Attorney General), 2025 ONCA 581, where the Court of Appeal for Ontario rejected a challenge to the constitutionality the “first-past-the-post” electoral system. I have blogged about it here, but this is a more in-depth and more focused take, which I have now posted on SSRN. Here is the abstract:

This comment on the decision of the Court of Appeal for Ontario’s decision in Fair Voting BC praises the Court for declining the invitation to extend the meaning of the right to vote protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The Court correctly holds Constitution of Canada says what it says, and not what an activist for one cause or another might wish it to say. The guarantee of the right to vote cannot be transfigured into a promise of aggregating individual votes in a specific manner in the name of an extra-textual promise of “effective representation.” 

The comment then notes that this approach to the Constitution of Canada does not entail a deferential or narrow role for the courts. Although they are not at liberty to impose extra-constitutional constraints on legislation, courts must vigorously enforce those that already exist. This means they can and must play an important role in ensuring the constitutionality of electoral arrangements, whether in relation to apportionment, the voters’ ability to cast a ballot, restrictions on political speech, etc. 

And just to leave on a bit of a teaser, I’ll probably have some more new and not-so-new things to announce, but that can wait for now.



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