Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I'll speak in English.
I'm a professor who's spent a good part of my life studying how judges are appointed in Canada and elsewhere in the world. I've always been interested in improving a process. I have been following with great interest the discussion of the current government's changes in the federal appointing system. I've come here today to put 10 points before you. I put them in the press earlier, and I'll elaborate on them, because I think they may help clarify what's at issue here today.
My first point is that in terms of patronage appointments to the judiciary, there's nothing to choose between the Mulroney Conservative governments and the Martin and Chrétien Liberal governments. They all gave--wait for it, here it comes--undue influence to political considerations in making judicial appointments. The political considerations of those three governments had more to do with party and personal connections than with ideology.
I think Canadians are very tired of the two parties, Conservatives and Liberals, both saying, “You think we're bad? They were just as bad.” I think that is just breeding cynicism among Canadian citizens.
I'm here today--and I support very much my colleague, Professor Grammond--to plead with you not to bring your partisan biting at each other into the consideration of how judges should be selected. There's been far too much partisanship in this process in the past.
My second point is that appointing lawyers who've been involved in politics is not necessarily a bad thing. Just because you've been in politics doesn't mean you won't make a good judge. You might make a terrific judge. It is only when political or ideological considerations outweigh considerations of professional legal ability that it is wrong. That's my second point.
Third, the advisory committee system, which was introduced, as Mr. Giroux told us, in 1988 at the federal level, permitted the undue influence of political favouritism to continue. It was really a camouflage system, and here's how it worked.
The committee received lists of candidates who met the requirements of 10 years' professional experience. They would then indicate--the committees would have a long list--which of the candidates on the list were highly recommended--really good, terrific, the A-list, tops, all-stars, really good--and then they would have others who were simply recommended.
Any person listening to that would say, “Well, surely the government would appoint the highly recommended.” No. Very often those who were simply recommended, who weren't as good in terms of the assessment committees--five people and then seven people assessed them as not as good as others on the minister's list--got appointed.
A number of us studied this process very carefully. They went over the highly recommended down to the recommended in order to appoint their political friends, playing politics with who gets to be a judge in the federal system of Canada, the superior courts of the provinces and territories and the federal courts. I think that's just shameful. I'm ashamed of it as a Canadian.
Fourth, in November 2005--not so long ago, just before the last federal election--a subcommittee of this committee that had been working on this very topic for many months and had heard many witnesses' public submissions, that had worked hard on it, had studied it, reached a consensus. Some of you were on that. I recognize some of your faces. The committee reached a consensus that the advisory committee should be reformed. By the way, part of that consensus was from members who are now in the government, including Mr. Toews.
The committee system should be reformed to provide the Minister of Justice with a short list--Professor Grammond's key point--of three to five of the persons assessed to be--and here I quote--“the best suited” for a particular judicial opening. They would send a short list of the very best; that's all. The sin of the long list would be discarded. It's the sin of the long lists that permits political favouritism to have undue influence. Unfortunately, the committee had just got to that point when the election ensued, so it never completed its final report.
Fifth is that the reform called for by the parliamentary committee I just referred to would bring the federal system of appointing judges in line with reforms of provincial appointing systems. Most of the provinces some years ago established--I might add to what Mr. Grammond said--by statute, balanced, independent bodies to assess candidates for judicial office and submit short lists of the best qualified candidates to government. I was the chair of the first of those committees in Ontario.
Ironically, this means that the judges of the so-called lower provincial courts are selected through a more rigorous merit system than judges of the provincial and territorial superior courts, who are appointed by the federal government. Some people who didn't make the cut in our provincial system were appointed federally because of their political ties to government. I'm ashamed of that.
Sixth, the reforms recently introduced by the federal government have weakened an already faulty federal system. The worst thing they have done is remove the advisory committee's function of identifying who are the best candidates, who are the highly qualified. If you have a committee working to advise you on the candidates, surely that's the advice you want. Taking that away renders the committees, whatever their membership, virtually useless.
Seventh, the Conservative government reforms have weakened the capacity of the committees to assess qualifications by taking voting power on the committees away from one judicial member, the judge. In my experience as a layperson chair at one of these committees at the provincial level, the judicial member is very often the very best-informed person on the needs of the court--the kinds of skills and specializations we are looking for, and the professional ability of the candidate.
I was glad to hear from Mr. Giroux that in the case of a tie the judge can cast a deciding vote. But I can tell you, having been on these committees, it's much better when you work hard to get a consensus rather than having a vote of four to three, or four to four. Then you're going to be recommending people who half the committee don't think will make good judges. Do we really need that? Do we really want that in Canada? I hope not.
Eighth, the addition to the committee of persons with police backgrounds, restructuring the committee so that four federal government appointees form the majority, and the Prime Minister's statements that he wants judges who will be “tougher on crime” all point in the direction of transforming the committees into ideological certifying bodies rather than bodies responsible for identifying the most qualified candidates for the judiciary. This shift to ideological assessment is particularly threatening to judicial independence in considering the promotion of judges who might well come to believe that their chances for promotion in the federal judiciary are diminished if they do not apply criminal law in the tough way that the majority on the advisory committees are looking for.
Ninth, what appear to be the Conservative government's main concerns in selecting judges have little relevance to many of the judicial positions that federal government fills; they're mostly about crime. Most of the work of the Federal Court, the Tax Court, and the provincial superior courts involves the conduct of civil trials, requiring high levels of competence in such matters as torts, contracts, intellectual property, taxation, and administrative law. Less than 2% of the criminal cases in Canada are tried in these provincial superior courts, yet that's what the emphasis seems to be on--a very marginal criterion in looking for people who are tough on crime and from the police community.
My final point is that changes made by the Conservative government in appointing the federal judiciary constitute a move to Americanize the Canadian judicial system, without the checks and balances that operate at the federal level in the U.S.
Like American presidents, Prime Minister Harper plans to appoint judges who will serve his party's ideology, but these selections will not be subject to public review and confirmation by a legislative body like the U.S. Senate. The Senate judiciary committee's examination of presidential nominees usually assures that candidates chosen for their political views meet reasonably high standards of political competence. There is no such check, balance, or public accountability in the Canadian federal system of appointing judges.
To sum up, the new system of appointing judges being instituted by the present government abandons consensus proposals for reform recently put forward by a parliamentary subcommittee of this committee and moves us away from a merit selection process toward an American emphasis on ideological considerations without the checks and balances of the U.S. system. Such a change should not proceed further without being carefully examined and approved by Parliament.
I'm very pleased that Mr. Ménard's motion was supported by the justice committee and that the government's changes to the system of selecting the federal judiciary will receive close scrutiny by Parliament, as they should.
Thank you very much.