Mr. Speaker, I am pleased to speak today on Bill C-37, an act to amend the Judges Act and to make consequential amendments to other acts, because of its extreme importance.
As with all bills relating to justice, I am going to try to examine it as in as cool and level-headed a manner as possible, and I will make a particular effort to avoid descending into the demagoguery I heard this morning from several of the Reform Party members, or the complacency the government party members seem to have with respect to courts and to judges.
This is a special bill in that it addresses an essential aspect of our democratic system: judiciary independence. This is a concept we often hear referred to, without always understanding exactly what it is all about. I believe it is important to take a few minutes, or seconds, to examine the principal aspects of this principle, in order to be able to assess and criticize the bill in a properly informed manner.
The basis for asserting that judiciary bodies responsible for interpreting and enforcing the rules of law must have a minimum of independence from governments and parliaments is the separation of powers concept. The expression institutional independence will be used in relation to the judicial system as a whole, while individual or functional independence relates to the judges sitting on the court. The bill before us today, Bill C-37, deals with the latter aspect.
The process by which judges are appointed must be considered in dealing with the individual independence of judges. The Constitution and parliaments recognize that the power to appoint judges is vested in the governments. The federal government appoints superior court judges and federal court judges, while provincial governments appoint provincial court judges.
The Constitutional Act, 1867 requires a single condition be met to become a judge and only for superior courts: judges must be selected from the bar of the province where they are being appointed, in accordance with the provisions of sections 97 and 98 of the Constitutional Act, 1867.
The federal lawmaker imposes an extra requirement on the central government. Judges must have at least 10 years standing at the bar of the province. Section 3 of the Judges Act deals more specifically with this additional requirement. The federal government therefore has considerable leeway in exercising its power to appoint judges. No other criterion limits its discretion regarding applicants' competency or qualifications.
As constitutional experts Henri Brun and Guy Tremblay pointed out in their book “Now that judicial independence has become a formal constitutional principle, one may wonder about the appropriateness of the process for appointing judges, particularly in the federal government”.
Before going any further, I would be remiss if I did not repeat once again in this House that it is also out of respect for judicial independence that the Bloc Quebecois opposed, and continues to oppose, the reference on Quebec's right to be the only one to decide its future. By imposing its reference to the supreme court, the Liberal government is seriously jeopardizing that tribunal's credibility. It is sad to see the government stubbornly forcing supreme court justices to be part of its despicable intimidation tactics toward Quebeckers.
When members opposite claim that their government is acting out of respect for the law, I am not convinced, far from it. In fact, I am convinced of just the opposite, particularly when I look at the statements made by the federal Minister of Justice and by the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs.
But let us go back to the legislation before us, Bill C-37, to take a good look at it and determine its purpose.
Bill C-37 amends the Judges Act to, among other things, increase judges' salaries and change eligibility criteria for an annuity. The bill also establishes the judicial compensation and benefits commission. Finally, Bill C-37 seeks to increase the number of judges on appeal courts and provincial family courts.
In her March 18 release, the Minister of Justice told us that the bill was in response to the recommendations of the 1995 triennial commission on judges' salaries and benefits. In its report, the Scott commission—named after the chairperson of the group which conducted the review of judges' salaries—recommended a gradual salary increase of 8.3%. The Liberal government accepted the recommendation and is proposing in its bill a 4.1% annual increase, over a two-year period.
In determining what was reasonable, the Scott commission recognized that a complex range of factors should be taken into consideration in setting an appropriate level of compensation, including the need to offer levels of compensation that will attract and keep candidates for the judiciary, and ensure that they are as highly qualified as possible.
In addition, it should be noted that the report is based on the relationship that exists between the income of a judge and that of a lawyer from the private sector, from which, it must be said, the majority of candidates for the office of judge come.
Section 25 of the Judges Act now provides a legal mechanism by which a judge's salary may be increased, in accordance with the industrial aggregate, by a maximum of 7%. Under the Public Sector Compensation Restraint Act, judges' salaries were frozen in December 1992 until March 31, 1997.
There is also the reference with respect to the independence and impartiality of Prince Edward Island provincial court judges. In a September 18, 1997 ruling, the supreme court stressed the importance of such independent commissions, which establish an essential link between two of the government's arms, the executive and the judiciary. The court also emphasized the constitutional obligation to determine the salaries of members of the judiciary.
The court so stipulated, and the following quote is extremely important in understanding the context in which the Bloc examined Bill C-37. The court found, and I quote: “However, to avoid the possibility of, or the appearance of, political interference through economic manipulation, a body, such as a commission, must be interposed between the judiciary and the other branches of government. The constitutional function of this body would be to depoliticize the process of determining changes to or freezes in judicial remuneration”.
In the words of the justices of the supreme court, in order to avoid the possibility of political interference, the court is proposing the creation of an independent body that would depoliticize the decision to increase or not to increase justices' salaries and benefits.
The Bloc therefore is right to worry about the way the Liberal government appoints justices to the supreme court. The justices have said themselves that there could be political interference through financial manipulation. What about their own appointments?
With the flourish of the Prime Minister's pen, a lawyer could be comfortably installed in a judge's chair on the bench of the Supreme Court of Canada. This is no fantasy. We have seen it happen just recently.
In addition to the conventional and constitutional criteria of eligibility, there are no doubt certain criteria the Prime Minister alone could explain to us. I will be careful not to head down this path. However, I would like the Prime Minister to list the criteria that guided him in appointing two justices to the supreme court.
Clearly, there is room for political interference in the remuneration of justices. There is certainly room for it in the appointment of justices, especially when the judges are appointed sub judice by the party initiating the reference to the supreme court in the matter of the future of Quebec.
This, less financial aspect of the function of a justice, although important, was not analyzed by the court, and we will limit ourselves naturally to the part on salaries, benefits and pensions relating to Bill C-37.
Although the recommendations of the Scott commission are not binding on the government, the same cannot be said for constitutional decisions of the supreme court, and the Bloc Quebecois is keenly aware of this.
Nonetheless, despite the arguments I have advanced since the beginning of my speech, the Bloc Quebecois wants the House to know that it will not be supporting this bill for several reasons.
First, it is important to look at Bill C-37 in context. The bill is proposing many amendments to the Judges Act. These amendments include a salary increase of 4.1% annually over two years. As I mentioned earlier, this increase would give effect to a recommendation by the Scott commission that a progressive salary increase of 8.3% would be justified.
Once again, the Bloc Quebecois decries the fact that the Scott report is based solely on indices of federal economic activities with no regard for the economic sectors most affected since the beginning of the 1993 cutbacks, some of which were the work of the present government.
As lawmakers, as elected officials living in a period of budgetary restraint, the most fundamental question we must ask ourselves in 1998 is therefore the following: Should we be putting books in our schools, or beds in our hospitals, or increasing the salaries of judges which, it should be remembered, stand at around $155,800 annually for superior court judges? To ask the question is to answer it.
The $155,800 salary of a superior court judge is hardly a starvation wage.
Through its leader, the member for Laurier—Saint-Marie, the Bloc Quebecois recently stated its views on salary increases for MPs and senior public servants.
Tabled on January 31, the Blais report, which looked at the salaries and benefits of members of the House, recommended that parliamentarians' expense allowances be abolished and their parliamentary allowances increased by an equivalent taxable amount.
One thing we must not forget is that this report did not recommend any increase in the total value of MPs' compensation. The proposals focussed solely on making this compensation more transparent.
In my opinion, whether one is a superior or lower court judge, an MP, a minister or the Prime Minister himself, we all have an extremely important role to play in the democratic system of Canada and of Quebec, and I sincerely believe that no one should be getting any increases if Canada or Quebec cannot afford them right now.
The Bloc Quebecois endorsed the recommendations of the Blais report, stating its view that an increase in MPs' salaries was not justified at this time. The same goes for superior court judges.>Paradoxically, the President of the Treasury Board, a good Liberal, recently announced an increase in the salaries of senior federal government managers, increasing the budget envelope by 7.96% between 1998 and 2002.
In the view of the Liberal government, the increase is justified by the exodus of senior managers for the private sector and the dearth of experienced and qualified managers that would result. It is great for those that remain, who are extremely competent, to hear that, if they are not paid enough, the good ones leave. Some encouragement for those who stay. But this is the explanation offered by the Treasury Board president.
With the salaries they are paid, and the associated benefits, these public servants are hardly to be pitied either, in my view. Yet, the President of the Treasury Board raised their salaries, but this raise did not affect superior court justices, and that is why the government decided to introduce Bill C-37, among others. As I understand it, this bill is in response to a decision by the Supreme Court of Canada, and as responsible legislators, as I was saying earlier, we have to respond to the remarks of the justices in their decision.
Let us now take a look at what happens in this area, in Quebec, among other places. I am a member from Quebec. I am going to talk to you about my country, Quebec, about what is being done in Quebec in this area.
In a press release dated February 20, 1998, the Quebec justice minister, Serge Ménard, announced the appointment of the members of the committee on the remuneration of justices of the court of Quebec and municipal courts. While this is a decision by the Supreme Court of Canada through a reference to it, Quebec responded with its usual professionalism and speed to a decision by this court.
Although this commission has the mandate to evaluate the remuneration of justices, clearly the government is not obliged to accept its recommendations. Indeed, the Quebec government or governments in general must be able to assess the economic context of any recommendation to increase salaries.
It is important to note that, on March 22, 1997, the Quebec government passed a bill which aimed to reduce labour costs in the public sector and which implemented the agreements concluded in this regard. It provided that the salaries of Quebec court judges would be cut by 2.3%. There was no mention in this legislation, as there is in Bill C-37 of a salary increase. In Quebec, legislation was passed to reduce the salaries of the provincial magistrates by 2.3%.
Need we point out that this reduction also applied to the premier of Quebec, to all the provincial ministers, to all the MNAs and to all the employees of the Quebec government.
In Quebec, the entire private sector has been or will be called upon to contribute to the deficit reduction effort. It is a matter of solidarity, as Quebec Premier Lucien Bouchard so aptly said.
We are going through difficult times of restraint due, to a large extent, to federal cuts to transfer payments to the provinces. Everyone must do his or her share to help balance the budget. Again, whether one is a judge sitting on a court, a member of Parliament, the Prime Minister, a minister, the speaker or deputy speaker of the House, I think that everyone must contribute to balancing the budget.
To conclude, the federal government has finally achieved its zero deficit, but must I remind you that this objective was achieved on the backs of the provinces and the unemployed. Over the course of two mandates, the Liberal government opposite will have cut $42 billion in social transfers to the provinces. These transfers are used to fund hospitals, higher education and social assistance among other things. Any money the federal government takes away from the provinces is money the provinces cannot invest in hospitals, education and social assistance.
The federal government is spending the money thus saved to increase its visibility, while the provinces are left with the dirty job of implementing the cuts. The Liberal government must not start squandering the taxpayers' money. Accordingly, while the Minister of Justice may want to be nice to judges by increasing their salaries, she should instead convince her colleague, the Minister of Finance, to give back the money cut from transfer payments to the provinces for health, social assistance and post-secondary education.
The Bloc Quebecois does not question the fact that judges play an essential role and that they work hard to create a just and fair society. However, we feel that before increasing judges' salaries, certain other priorities should be met.
We do not think that the state of judicial independence in Canada and in Quebec requires that Bill C-37 provide an 8.2% increase, over a two-year period, to superior court judges. These are prestigious positions and, to my knowledge, no appointee was ever forced to accept the job. There is no arm twisting required to appoint a judge. When a person agrees to become a judge, whether on the supreme court, the federal court, the superior court or other Quebec courts, surely that person knows about the salary that goes with the job and accepts it. The government must not introduce a bill such as this one under the pretence that judges are not adequately paid.
It is for these reasons that the Bloc Quebecois is opposed to increasing judges' salaries. We support the establishment of an independent commission, but we cannot support a lack of solidarity and vision in an economic context where the fight against the deficit was conducted mostly at the expense of the provinces.
We heard the government say that the most qualified lawyers must be interested in becoming judges. But a magistrate is also part of society, and being part of society means bearing part of the collective burden. Even if the federal deficit is eliminated, as we have seen, the $500 billion debt remains to haunt us. It will continue to haunt us for many years and many generations to come.
With the money we are preparing to inject into this salary hike for judges and magistrates, the government could have enabled the provinces to invest in their hospitals, where they feel the money would be put to better use.
The supplementary estimates tabled last Wednesday also indicate that the Canadian unity group at Justice—within the Department of Justice there is a so-called Canadian unity group, the main responsibility of which is the reference to the Supreme Court—is costing Canadian and Quebec taxpayers $700,000.
Such expenditures are unacceptable. This money could pay for a number of hospital beds. Especially since the Minister of Justice herself has said that the reference was of no use whatsoever to clarify the constitutionality of the potential secession of Quebec.
The government ought to re-examine its budget priorities. Should it raise judges' salaries and spend a fortune on a reference to the Supreme Court, which even the Minister of Justice admits is of no use and whose validity is being challenged left and right, or should it hand over all these millions, these billions even, appropriated from the provinces?
Today I am therefore asking the Minister of Justice to withdraw her bill as drafted and instead to compensate the provinces for the unjust cuts her government and herself have forced upon the governments of each and every province. In our opinion, because Bill C-37 was introduced in the House subsequent to the Supreme Court of Canada ruling on this important matter of appointing justices, the Minister ought not to be giving the judges such a gift during these difficult times.
If the government wants the support of the Bloc Quebecois, it must limit its actions to striking what the Supreme Court ruling calls for, a Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission, as provided for in clause 6 of the bill. Nowhere in the Supreme Court ruling is there a request that the federal government increase the salaries of superior court justices in this way. On the contrary, the supreme court ruling asks the Canadian government and all provincial governments to establish a commission that would rely on various external, objective factors in determining compensation. The supreme court judges never said that the decision of such a commission would be binding on the government.
Each of us in the House was elected in a general election or a by-election. The government was also elected. The Minister of Justice was elected to administer as fairly as possible. In handing down such a ruling, the judges never thought that the increase would be given automatically, with judges receiving increases when no one else did. Judges are not above everyone else. It is each one of us, all taxpayers in Canada and Quebec, who, indirectly, pay the salaries of judges of the superior court, or, in Quebec's case, of family, criminal or youth courts. Each one of us pays for these judges.
If the public were to be asked, the answer would be immediate. If you were to ask the average citizen: “Do you agree that the judges of the superior court, who are earning only $155,800 a year, should have their salaries increased by 8.2%?” The answer will obviously be no. Is $155,800 a starvation wage? Do they not earn enough to hand down fair rulings? No.
I am a lawyer myself. Before coming here, I was a practicing lawyer and often had to deal with judges. I was frequently in court. One must keep one's distance from judges, but no one who had accepted the office of judge ever told me that they were surprised to be earning only $150,000 for the honour. We all know how federal judges are appointed.
In my office in Joliette, my articling supervisor received a call from the then Minister of Justice, a Progressive Conservative. The telephone rang, and it was the Minister of Justice. He said: “Hello, Mr. Justice” as if he had no idea that he had been seeking such an appointment for years. That is how these things are done. But when he said “Yes, Mr. Minister” he knew what a judge earned, and he accepted the appointment. I think that, nowadays, neither judges nor the Prime Minister—