Madam Speaker, I would like to let Canadians who are watching this debate know that we are debating a motion brought forward by my party, the official opposition, the Canadian Alliance. The motion reads as follows:
That this House call upon the government to bring in measures to protect and reassert the will of Parliament against certain court decisions...
Which ones are they? There are three. The first is rulings that would reverse the traditional definition of marriage as decided by the House to be, “the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others”. This was decided by the House in 1998. The second ruling would grant house arrest to child sexual predators and make it easier for child sexual predators to produce and possess child pornography. The third ruling that concerns us and that we feel Parliament should deal with is one that grants prisoners the right to vote.
What I would like to add to the debate today is a discussion of a very important principle. The important principle is as follows: that it should be the elected representatives of the people in the House who decide the laws under which our society operates rather than appointed members of the judiciary who are not elected and who are not responsible or answerable to the people of this country. That is a very important principle.
I would like to point out why this is a concern. As I mentioned before, I was here and I believe you were here, Madam Speaker, when we had a debate and a vote a few years ago on the important issue of the definition of marriage. A majority of the House and the majority of most of the parties in the House upheld the definition of marriage as an institution, which is defined by the union of one man and one woman to the exclusion of all others. That was what Parliament decided. What has happened? As everyone knows, there have been recent court rulings which say that this decision by Parliament contravenes the charter and that the definition of marriage, according to these court rulings, must be changed.
With respect to the matter of house arrest, Parliament says that house arrest should only be given to people who do not pose a risk to society. What are the courts doing? In case after case house arrest, which is basically no punishment at all, is given to people who are a risk to society. A case in point is that of Ronald James Aucoin in New Brunswick who was twice convicted of child molestation and being a sexual predator. What was he given for causing this harm to innocent children? He was given 18 months house arrest. That was it. Therefore, our courts are using the law of this Parliament in a way that it was never intended to be used.
With respect to the law on child pornography, there are many sections of our Criminal Code which make it illegal and unlawful to produce and own child pornography. Yet in the well known Sharpe case the courts, right up to the Supreme Court, ruled that there was some artistic merit in this material and therefore the Criminal Code provisions, which we past in the House to outlaw it, were of no effect.
With respect to giving prisoners the right to vote, the elected representatives of the people of Canada have said that if someone breaks the law in significant ways and is imprisoned for it, and as we have just seen it is pretty hard to be put in prison for breaking the law so one would have to be a pretty serious criminal to be imprisoned, then that person does not get to pick the lawmakers of the country because that person is a law breaker. That is what our law says, as passed in the House. What did the courts say? They said that law was unconstitutional and we had to let violent offenders and lawless people vote and have full participating rights in our democratic society. This is a tremendous concern.
Let us remind ourselves of what this is all about. This is about a nice, little word called democracy. It is one that is thrown about with great abandon very often in our society. Yet what does it really mean? Do we think about that and do we really honour it with the way we order our society? Democracy means rule by the people. Because there are 30 million of us to come together and decide on all the things that we want to do to make our society a good, safe and well ordered society, we elect people to speak for us.
About every 100,000 Canadians elect someone like me to come to this place to consider the measures that must be taken to protect, to order our society and to put those into place. We represent 100,000 people, more or less. We are their voice to allow them to rule their own affairs and we are accountable to them. If we do something that the people who elected us do not approve of, then they can turf us out of office and have done so in the past. That is what democracy means.
If we get to the point, as we have, where judges decide that certain laws passed by the representatives, the voice of the people, can no longer be effective, then I submit that is undemocratic. That is completely and utterly a slap in the face to the democratic values and traditions that we claim to hold dear because judges are not elected. They are not accountable to the people. In fact they are appointed mostly by the Prime Minister. If the people of this country do not like the direction or the judgments that are made, there is nothing they can do about it.
I want to stop and make it clear at this point that this is not a criticism of judges. There is a huge number of very fine, committed, intelligent, capable people serving in our judiciary and we are very proud of our judicial system in this country. What is causing the problem is that instead of Parliament asserting its supremacy as the voice of the people in a democratic country, we have abdicated in many cases decision making and important interpretation of laws to the point where the interpretation becomes law making.
Not long ago we had a judge appear before our immigration committee and in the course of our discussion with him the judge said the following:
--I'm always concerned when legislation uses imprecise language because what you're saying to a judge is “You solve it”. You're asking judges, who don't have experience and who don't really have any background as to the real purpose of what Parliament is trying to do, to come up with an answer.
Language should be as precise as possible and I can only tell you that after almost 40 years of having to deal with provisions, particularly the Criminal Code provisions...legislation is getting more confusing every day.
One gets the impression that when the draughtsmen don't know what to do and how to solve a problem, they just use imprecise language hoping that someone will solve it some day.
He also said, from the point of view of a judge:
I would always welcome legislation that was precise and defined what we were supposed to do, rather than leaving it up to the judge to define, because then you get different judges having to define it and you have different interpretations. Then you need to go to the Court of Appeal for them to come up with a single definition, and from there you end up going to the Supreme Court of Canada, which may disagree with the Court of Appeal...many problems [are created]...
It is not only the people of Canada or members of Parliament who see this as a problem. It is the judges themselves and it is up to us to fix it.
An example of what the judge was talking about would be a bill that makes amendments to the Criminal Code intending to safeguard children from sexual exploitation. Supposedly, it would make it easier to prosecute sexual predators. However, in fact it does not. What the bill does is it takes the existing defences to possession of child pornography, and those defences are that it is of artistic merit, educational, serves scientific or medical purposes, or serves the public good, and repackages all of those defences into one single defence of the public good.
However, nowhere in the legislation from the House is the public good defined. What are judges supposed to do? They must put a definition in place because we did not have either the foresight or the intestinal fortitude to make it clear what we meant. Thus we have a situation where the court decides.
Here is what the Supreme Court said in the Sharpe case which supported a child pornographer possessing the most horribly explicit and degrading material involving children. The court said:
It might be argued that the public good is served by possession of materials that promote expressive or psychological well-being or enhance one's sexual identity in ways that do not involve harm to others.
How anyone could suggest that the creation of this material would not involve harm to the very children it preys on and degrades is beyond belief.
If the people of Canada or members of Parliament were asked whether this made sense and whether they wanted this to govern someone who could own or produce child pornography they would say no way, of course not. Yet, what we say does not matter because we have this vague legislation talking about the public good which puts the real power of determination into the hands of judges. In many cases the judges do not want this.
I would like to quote Abraham Lincoln from his first inaugural address where he said:
The candid citizen must confess that, if the policy of the Government upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed by decisions of the Supreme Court, the people will have ceased to be their own rulers, having to that extent practically resigned their Government into the hands of that eminent tribunal.
That is what Abraham Lincoln said 150 years ago. What have we learned? Here we are today making the very same mistake that Lincoln warned against in the early days of the formation of another great democracy in the United States. The decision that caused Lincoln so much problem was the infamous Dred Scott decision which created a constitutional right to own slaves. That is what the court had decided, even though the leader of the country said, no, we want an end to slavery.
The simple fact is that a constitutional document in the hands of the judiciary has the potential to undermine democratic institutions by taking out of the hands of the people the ability to make the most basic moral and cultural decisions.
If we were to do a survey of any group of Canadians not behind bars and asked, “Should violent criminals who have murdered, raped, mugged, robbed and otherwise abused the rights of innocent citizens be allowed to have all the rights and privileges of citizens in democratic elections?”, we would get a huge percentage of the majority of people replying, “Is this a joke? Why are we even being asked this question? The answer is no”.
Yet, we cannot have the will and the common sense of people on this important issue of who gets to choose our lawmakers. We cannot have the will of the people prevail because a small group of unelected, unaccountable people have decided otherwise.
The House has a duty if it cares about democracy, if it means business about what our country is all about, and if it means business about our values and traditions of a people free to rule and govern their own affairs through their elected representatives. We have a responsibility to fix this situation. There is a simple way to fix this situation. It is one that no government has ever been willing to do. We must access the clauses in our Constitution that would allow us to make certain that the will of Parliament prevails, like the notwithstanding clause.
We would say that notwithstanding any interpretation of the charter it is the will of the people of this country that prisoners do not vote. It is the will of the people of this country that the institution of marriage remain the way it is. It is the will of the people of this country that no one will be allowed to produce or to own child pornography because it is repugnant and repellant and because we have a duty to protect our children.
That is what we should be saying. We should be standing up for democracy and for the voice of the people, and saying this is the decision that will stand, period. It is not up to the courts to overrule by judicial interpretation what the House and people of Canada, by giving the House authority, decide is right for our society. That is exactly what our motion says.
The motion in its fundamental essence is in defence of the democratic principles and values that we claim to hold dear but are allowing to slip away, ruling by ruling, decision by decision, on issues that are fundamental to the way our society is ordered, fundamental to the way we treat each other, and fundamental to the way we protect our most vulnerable members.
No matter what side the House might come down on these judicial rulings and no matter that we know that judges are honourable people and try their anxious best to do a good job in the position they have been placed in, the fact of the matter is that it is completely wrong. No matter what the decision is, no matter the honour and integrity of the people making it, it is completely wrong in a democracy for unelected people to be making fundamental societal decisions that are not accountable in a democratic sense.
The House has the ability, the tools, the right, and the legal authority to put a stop to that. However, it is not willing to do that. Our motion urges the House to make the changes that would allow us to protect and reassert the will of Parliament. It is not only the will of Parliament; it is the voice and forum where the people are able to rule and govern their own affairs.
I urge the House to support the motion.