Thank you, Mr. Chair.
First of all, I did have a chance to listen in to the earlier presentation and to hear both of those presenters and most of the questions. I regret that I'm not there in person today, but I was able to hear it. Of course, they've covered a fair bit of ground in terms of the rule of law and the applicable legal principles that govern these issues.
I have some points of difference that I would like to address and would be happy to answer questions on.
In particular, I think that what we assess as being rational or not rational requires a much more profound understanding of the facts here. In terms of the law, I think we understand that the rule of law requires that all public officials, when they act, must have a lawful authority to point to that is consistent with the rule of law, consistent with our constitutional conventions and principles and consistent with the important independent role that the Attorney General plays.
A slight point of distinction, in my view, with respect to the matter is that there is a fair amount of discussion about the obligation of the Attorney General, when acting as an Attorney General...that they should resign. I did have a chance to listen, and I would have some distinct views on that from what I heard in your prior panel.
Again, we do not know the full facts, and facts are very significant. There are nuances that are very critical here. I think that there could be a rational explanation as to why an Attorney General, acting as the chief prosecutor and chief law officer of Canada, would not resign when their prosecutorial independence was challenged. That's because I think it is a constitutional requirement, consistent with the rule of law in Canada, that prosecutors do not resign, that they stand firm in the face of pressure, if there is pressure—and I appreciate that's not factually fully established—and they stand firmly in the defence of the rule of law.
Prosecutors are very rarely fired for doing their job. However, if an Attorney General was proven to have stood firm in her decision-making as a prosecutor and as a lead prosecutor for Canada, namely as the Attorney General enmeshed and embedded in this very significant and well-articulated rule of law function, I think there would have been a very concerning situation if she had been removed.
With regard to the issue of resignation versus removal, it may very well be that we have a situation where we have a prosecutor that was removed from her role as opposed to an Attorney General who should resign. In fact, prosecutors should not resign. Lead prosecutors, when they've taken a decision, should hold firm in their decision, and that is consistent with the rule of law.
Alternatively, I think it's important that those who may seek to influence or to engage the Attorney General when she's wearing that hat as Attorney General...and I agree with the former panellist that the Shawcross doctrine is a fairly flimsy basis in which to blanket oneself in terms of a public official saying, “I can approach the Attorney General and vigorously attempt to persuade her to another view because I have the Shawcross doctrine.” I think that Shawcross has to be understood more broadly within the Constitution of Canada, the principles of the rule of law, which have been very clearly upheld in the Manitoba language reference, the succession reference, the judge's reference and others.
I think the issue of the Attorney General acting as prosecutor is that they should remain firm. Someone who is seeking to invoke the Shawcross doctrine to say, “I have lawful authority to approach an Attorney General and seek to convince her of another view”, I think has a fairly flimsy foundation in terms of lawful authority. I would be very careful about pointing to that.
All public officials, members of the executive branch and administrative branch of government, must always point to lawful authority for the actions they take. It must be clearly articulated and it must be evident. I think if there are ambiguities of any kind, those ambiguities will always be resolved in favour of these very significant independent and quasi-judical roles, like the independence of the Attorney General of Canada.
Obviously, the independence and the role of the Attorney General are not always subject to scrutiny and review such as we are talking about it today. In the context of actual prosecutions, obviously there's been a fair amount of scrutiny of the role of the public prosecution service and the prosecutors of Canada, whether that be because of charter rights issues, whether that be because of issues where there's impropriety and there may be torts of malicious prosecution. These matters do come to the courts in different ways, but the actual exercise of the discretion to decide to pursue a prosecution is something that is really not looked at unless there is, I think as the late Justice Marc Rosenberg said, “flagrant impropriety”. I think that some of these principles are fairly well-established.
The prosecutorial function has to be exercised independently. We've identified that and we understand that. The decision points in the prosecution role, including the decision to pursue a prosecution, once that commences and we then go into a court process, whether that's a preliminary inquiry stage, whether that's a trial—and again, having been a judge and run many trials, there have been many times when we start a trial, and it ends up with a resolution where I certainly would have counsel before me to say, “Your Honour, we have a joint submission on a resolution of the matter we would like to put to you.” We were well out of the starting gates of the trial, but things changed.
In prosecutions, things do change, but they change within a scope of decision-making that has some very definite parameters. They change because there may be a difference in terms of the likelihood of conviction of one offence. They change to perhaps spare a victim having to testify. They change for a whole variety of reasons. Of course, we do promote resolution of matters without having every case fully tried.
When a prosecutor has decided to test, before a court, the evidence that the investigative branch of government has prepared for them to pursue a prosecution, that decision is a very significant decision point. There is limited lawful authority for anyone to intervene at that decision point and going forward. If, in the instance that you're examining—as I say, we don't know the facts—we're finding there are interventions that are seeking to address that decision point, I think that's a very significant issue that would attract concern for the rule of law in Canada.
Having worked closely with prosecutions and understanding how the prosecution service works, I can say that prosecutors are very well trained. They hold themselves and others to account, and if there's any indication that decisions stray from lawful considerations, they are able to establish boundaries. I'm not sure in this instance if this is a case where there was not the ability to establish boundaries, but perhaps this is an instance where a prosecutor was actually fired for establishing a boundary that was not popularly accepted. I'm not sure of that. I think there is some suspicion and concern about that.
I would also say that to the extent that we have any ambiguity about what the rules that apply are, that ambiguity rests in the issue of what lawful authority public officials or other members of the executive branch of government rely on to justify their actions. I haven't followed the matter very closely, but other than the Shawcross doctrine, which I think is a somewhat flimsy foundation for this, the lawful authority is somewhat shaky in terms of being able to intervene with a prosecutor.
I do think the facts are extremely important. It is not inappropriate for a public official to engage with prosecutors and say, “Should you require additional information, I am standing ready to provide it to you.” That's a fairly fair position. When we get beyond that position, that would be a more passive and respectful approach, and we get into a very vigorous position of saying, “I challenge you to take a different position.” I think we are into very serious issues with the rule of law.
There are a variety of factors at play, and some of them were identified by the previous panellists, but certainly, we would need to understand very clearly how that experience or situation may have unfolded. This is not to suggest, by any means, that an Attorney General is a thin-skinned individual who can't take push back; the issue is the propriety of entreaties that may be made to an Attorney General. The propriety really goes to the zone of, for what purpose?
If the purpose was to persuade the Attorney General as chief prosecutor to take a different position on a prosecution, it triggers a serious rule of law concern. How will we know whether that's serious or not? Well, obviously, you need to hear from those who may have been involved. Maybe this is completely unfounded and we have no reason to be concerned about the rule of law. I certainly would hope that this is the case. However, when I think about the spectrum of entreaties that can be made to an Attorney General, I think there's a range that would be very troubling to me, and there are some that would be deeply troubling to me.
One of the areas that would be most troubling to me would be if public officials and members of the executive went to an Attorney General and said, “I don't like the decision that you have reached and I would like you to get another opinion from someone else.” That would be very troubling. I'm not saying that is the case here, but that's an example, upon reflection, where I think it's somewhat of a repudiation of the decision point role for the Attorney General as lead prosecutor. If the discussion was, as I said earlier, to indicate point of information, “There's material that we may share, should you be interested in receiving it....”
In between those two extremes, one being “We may insist on you getting a different opinion because we don't agree or respect your opinion”—I'm not saying that applied here, but if that did pertain, it's very serious, and the other, “We're standing ready to provide information if you want it,” there's a whole range and degree of entreaties that could have occurred, all of which would engage serious rule of law issues and would need to be carefully examined incident by incident if they happened.
Obviously, in terms of the rule of law—