NDP will seek emergency debate on Ford’s use of notwithstanding clause in CUPE case
CUPE #CUPE
© THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov Ontario Premier Doug Ford speaks inside the legislature, in Toronto on Wednesday September 14, 2022.The Ontario government says it intends to use the notwithstanding clause to keep a proposed law in place that would ban education workers from going on strike.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Christopher Katsarov
The NDP is asking for the House of Commons to hold an emergency debate regarding Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s decision to invoke the notwithstanding clause in a move that would impose a contract on thousands of education support workers.
The clause gives governments the ability to pass a law overriding parts of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms for a five-year term. It’s supposed to be a rarely used piece of legislation, but provinces have tried to invoke it multiple times in the last two years.
“I will be seeking leave on Wednesday November 2, 2022, to propose an emergency debate regarding the use of the Ontario Government’s use of notwithstanding clause to override the Charter protected right to collective bargain,” read the letter to the Speaker, signed by NDP MP Matthew Green.
“There is a clear interest for this parliament to debate the trampling of constitutional rights and the implication it will have for everyone in Ontario and across the country.”
The NDP will be putting forward a unanimous consent motion on the issue Wednesday afternoon as well. In it, they plan to ask the House of Commons to “reject any intervention aimed at restricting the collective rights of workers to freely negotiate their working conditions.”
The party will also try to get MPs to back a call to “condemn the use of the notwithstanding clause to destroy collective bargaining rights by Conservative Premier Doug Ford and the government of Ontario.”
Read more:
Trudeau calls Ford’s use of notwithstanding clause ‘wrong’
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Trudeau calls Ford’s use of notwithstanding clause ‘wrong’
The request comes as the Ontario government continues to debate Bill 28. The legislation would force 55,000 education support workers into a four-year contract, prohibit a strike for those years, and — thanks to the notwithstanding clause — prevent the union from invoking a Charter challenge.
The decision has been condemned by multiple politicians, including Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who called it “wrong.”
“I know that collective bargaining negotiations are sometimes difficult, but it has to happen,” Trudeau told reporters.
“The suspension of people’s rights is something that you should only do in the most exceptional circumstances, and I really hope that all politicians call out the overuse of the notwithstanding clause to suspend people’s rights and freedoms.”
In his letter calling for the emergency debate, Green also condemned Ontario’s invocation of the clause, saying the move “explicitly undermined the negotiation process and has undercut the ability of workers to exercise their right to collective bargain and their right to strike.”
“It further imposes disproportionate punitive measures for those workers who will take action to defend their rights,” Green added.
Breaking down the Notwithstanding Clause
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Ford’s government has pushed back on criticisms, saying the use of the notwithstanding clause is necessary to prevent legal challenges which “may create destabilizing uncertainty for students and families.”
Green, however, called the move “another step” in a “disturbing trend” of provinces being “increasingly willing” to override the constitutional rights of their citizens.
Ontario’s premier first invoked the notwithstanding clause in June of last year, in a bid to restore parts of the Election Finances Act that had previously been declared unconstitutional.
Ford also threatened to use the clause in 2018 to slash Toronto city council seats, but ultimately did not invoke it.
In June of this year, Quebec used the notwithstanding clause to cover an entire bill related to language requirements — two articles of which were later suspended due to concerns about access to justice. The province also used the notwithstanding clause in relation to its religious symbols law, Bill 21.
Should the Speaker accept Green’s request to hold an emergency debate, the conversation will be held in the House of Commons on Wednesday evening.
— with files from Global News’ Amanda Connolly, Colin D’Mello, and The Canadian Press