The nine: a lively account of the powers, good and ill, of our top judges.
Songer, Donald R.
Mighty Judgment: How the Supreme Court of Canada Runs Your Life
Philip Slayton
Allen Lane Canada
340 pages, hardcover
ISBN 9780670069279
PHILIP SLAYTON'S new book, Mighty Judgment: How the Supreme
Court of Canada Runs Your Life, comes at a particularly appropriate
time. In the aftermath of a landmark federal election, Canada's new
majority government will probably have the opportunity to appoint five
members of the Supreme Court and these five individuals could
dramatically change the court's role in Canadian politics.
Moreover, this dramatic opportunity may bring pressure to reconsider
past practices for appointing justices.
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Mighty Judgment is not written for scholars. Slayton pitches his
message to a general readership of Canadian citizens who may know very
little about either the importance or the actual workings of their
supreme court. Giving an insider's look at how the court operates,
he mixes telling detail with enlivening anecdote. How has the
court's functioning been affected by the Charter of Rights and
Freedoms? What major cases have defined the court's post-Charter
role? Who are the court's leading players, and how might their
political views and personal backgrounds affect how they approach the
cases that come before them? Such pragmatic questions underlie
Slayton's accessible narrative.
For example, readers will come away with a good sense of Chief
Justice Beverley McLachlin's consensual style of leadership and the
extent to which she has subtly transformed prevailing court procedures
to enhance the oversight function of her position. They will learn a
good deal about other leading justices as well--the "courageous,
principled, and independently minded" Ian Binnie, and the
"bold, uncompromising, and outspoken" Rosalie Abella. Slayton
is relatively blunt in describing some of the tensions that have marked
the court's deliberations, not least during the tenure of the
"likeable but flawed" Chief Justice Antonio Lamer between 1990
and 2000. And in one of the book's most entertaining chapters,
Slayton summarizes the often misunderstood role of the court's law
clerks (having served as one himself during the late 1960s) in forging a
link between the court's justices and current thinking in the
nation's law schools.
But the main purpose of Mighty Judgment is to summarize
Slayton's view of what the role of the court should be in
post-Charter Canada. He never shies away from being provocative,
although at times his conclusions are based on apparently flimsy
evidence. A case in point: he contends that the court is secretive. We
might ask, compared to what? In fact, in contrast to most other arms of
government, the court is extremely open. There is no secret lobbying.
Anyone wanting to influence the court's decisions must present
arguments in sessions available to anyone who is interested through
public television broadcasts. All written attempts to influence are also
on the public record and easily obtainable. And every court decision is
announced, with the justices providing justifications for everything
they do. I doubt there is any major institution, public or private,
anywhere in North America that is more open and transparent about its
decision making.
Slayton also contends that the court is paternalistic, but this
argument receives virtually no explanation or elaboration. One might see
this as a cheap shot. Government is frequently attacked, by those who
dislike its policies, as being both distant and paternalistic, but such
criticism usually reveals more about the position of the critic than
about the actual decisions of the institution being criticized.
Similarly, he describes the court as competent--notwithstanding his
dismissive suggestion that most of its judgements resemble "essays
written by diligent B students"--but devotes little attention to
making the case. The reader must infer this competence from his
descriptions of the complex issues the court is asked to decide, and
from the detailed portraits of the backgrounds of the justices provided
in Mighty Judgment, which suggest that as a group the justices would
rank among the best educated and most intellectual elite of the country.
In any event, the court's competence appears to be accepted by
almost all those who have seriously studied the court--both supporters
and detractors.
Slayton is most interested in outlining the political role of the
court, and what he argues is that role's wholesale transformation
since the introduction of the Charter of Rights. Critics in many
countries are fond of characterizing courts as undemocratic. It comes as
no surprise that Slayton joins the chorus. On the surface, the criticism
seems correct. The justices are not elected or politically accountable.
But the undemocratic nature of courts seems inherent in the way their
role is conceptualized in common law. When it comes to deciding private
disputes, most people appear to want a judge who is simply fair and
unbiased; few would want a decision about who is at fault in an
automobile accident to be based on which litigant supports the majority
party in government. So from the standpoint of many citizens it is more
important that a court is fair and unbiased and independent of the
government than it is that it is democratic.
Whether a court is undemocratic only becomes a concern when it
makes policy. An essential part of the idea of democracy is that
governments adopt policies that reflect the preferences of the citizens.
And it is not clear whether the Canadian court's decisions are
actually further removed from majority preferences than are those of our
parliament. Slayton notes that opinion polls show that a majority of
Canadians approve of the way the court interprets Charter rights, which
suggests it is being responsive. While studies of a number of courts in
advanced democracies have consistently found a tendency of courts to
support elite interests, this is decidedly not true in Canada, where the
court favours appeals brought by ordinary individuals more frequently
than it does those brought by corporations. Moreover, in supporting
minority rights against majority preferences (what many would see as a
key feature of truly democratic decision making), the court has taken
many strong stands.
What about representativeness, another key feature of democratic
decision making? Judges in all modern democracies may be
unrepresentative in the sense that they are more highly educated than
the average citizen, but Canada's court is more representative than
others. As Slayton notes, the Canadian court has gone further toward
gender diversification than most others. In addition, its selection
rules ensure geographical diversity in a country in which much of the
politics revolves around regional conflict. The court reflects the
diversity of the country in a number of other ways, including
representation of the major religions of the country and its major
political parties. In both the United States and the United Kingdom, the
top court has been dominated by the graduates of a few elite
universities and law schools, but the educational background of Canadian
justices reflects the broad diversity of the Canadian educational
system. Thus, while there are some undemocratic features, the Canadian
court stands out as being decidedly more democratic than most.
Slayton's most important contention--and the overarching theme
of his book--is that the court has morphed into an overtly political
institution, and that judges have become politicians. This is by no
means due to the court's own initiative, he argues:
Canadians ... have come to love recharacterizing
political problems as legal questions. It is
encouraged by politicians who enjoy ducking
behind the Charter to avoid becoming entangled
in controversial issues like abortion.
Those who want to change the law move away
from the political arena, where moral and
social policy arguments can be considered
head-on, and where due weight can be given
to public opinion. They go to court, and make
complex and technical constitutional arguments
that obscure the real issues.
That the court makes law will come as no surprise to serious
scholars who have studied the court's work. But the biggest
contribution of Mighty Judgment is bringing this undisputed fact
compellingly to readers' consciousness. "Judges make
law," Slayton notes. "Some people deny it." After reading
his extensive accounts of judicial decisions in life-and-death questions
such as assisted suicide, issues of private life such as the
court's famous ruling on same-sex marriage or the rights of
defendants in a host of lesser known but equally influential decisions,
the careful reader will not likely continue to deny the court's
important and continuing lawmaking role. Mighty Judgment effectively
makes the point that this law making is a highly political process in
which the values and perspectives of justices inevitably shape their
decisions. Once one realizes that the justices are important law makers
who are influenced by their personal political passions, it becomes
critical to examine whether this law making is competent and democratic,
who the law makers are and how they got their jobs.
However, in his zeal to shatter the myth of judges as non-political
legal technicians, Slayton goes overboard. Judges are certainly
influential political figures, but their power pales when compared to
that of the prime minister and Parliament, with whom they frequently
must share authority. Moreover, in many critical areas, including
foreign affairs, central budget issues and questions such as how great
the tax burden should be and who should bear it, how we should deal with
global warming and environmental problems, and how we should ensure the
growth of jobs and the economy, the court rarely plays a significant
role. Few, if any, serious scholars would agree with Slayton that
"Supreme Court justices are the most important decision-makers in
Canada."
His account also fails to put the court's political role into
a realistic historical and comparative perspective. Judges in many other
countries are important political decision makers, sometimes exercising
greater political power than their Canadian counterparts. Moreover, in
the common law world, judges have regularly been making law for at least
500 years. In this world, law making is built into the very structure of
judging. Judges in England were regularly creating law in important
areas such as torts, criminal procedure, family relations and commercial
obligations out of nothing more than their own political values and
their own sense of what the traditions and expectations of the people
demanded long before there were any English colonies in North America.
And when English colonists arrived they brought with them ideas about
the proper law-making role of common law judges.
In his concluding chapter, Slayton gives his suggestions for
reform. His main concern is the way justices are selected. He favours a
variant of the American or British judicial selection models, but fails
to make a persuasive case that either of those systems has produced
better choices than those in Canada. Arguing for a requirement of
parliamentary approval of candidates nominated by the prime minister, he
notes the salutary effects of debate. But he misses the fact that in
almost all the examples he cites, the tough questions and votes against
confirmation came from a legislative body controlled by the opposition
party. In a parliamentary system, the opposition would rarely if ever
have an opportunity to defeat the prime minister's choice.
He further proposes eliminating geographical representation as a
requirement, but does not address the fact that this requirement adds
legitimacy to the court without decreasing the quality of those
selected. Putting a twelve-year limit on the justices' terms in
office would make the court more democratic in the sense of increasing
the chance that the views of the justices reflect current majority
thinking in the country, but it would also reduce the court's
independence. There is little evidence that the effect of this change
would be very great either way. Slayton also proposes that all justices
be bilingual. This is probably a sensible requirement in a bilingual
country, but again not a reform that would be expected to have a very
great substantive effect on the way the court operates. Finally, he
proposes strict financial disclosure laws. Again, probably a good idea
but one that may have a minimal impact given the absence of financial
scandals on the court under existing rules.
These concluding recommendations are less radical than one might
have anticipated from Slayton's previous analysis--a contrast he
attributes to a subtle change in his views during the course of writing
Mighty Judgment. "I've come to favour an interventionist
court," he maintains, "persuaded in the end of their role in
guarding against the tyranny of the majority, and particularly in
guarding against the executive branch." But because of his largely
anecdotal and at times sketchy treatment of these issues, not all will
be similarly persuaded. Slayton has done a great service in bringing the
personalities and procedures of Canada's supreme court into clear
view for a wide readership. Nonetheless, Mighty Judgment is far from
providing the last word when it comes to a thorough treatment of the
court's evolving significance, or a systematic analysis of this
trend's wider ramifications.
Donald R. Songer is the Olin D. Johnston Professor of Political
Science at the University of South Carolina. His book, The
Transformation of the Supreme Court of Canada, was published by
University of Toronto Press in 2008 and McGill-Queen's University
Press will publish Law, Ideology and Collegiality: Judicial Behaviour in
the Supreme Court of Canada this fall.