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INTRODUCTION TO CANADA AND CANADIAN FEDERALISM

Some Basic Features of Canadian Federalism

Origins and Historical Evolution of Canada


Constitutional Structure Division of Powers Between Ottawa and the Provinces Major Trends and Events Conclusion

Some basic features


One of worlds oldest, most successful federations A federal state underpinned by a federal society and a federal economy One of the worlds most decentralized federations Federal-provincial relationship is one of equality and partnership, not hierarchy, paternalism A negotiated country A multinational country

ORIGINS AND HISTORICAL EVOLUTION OF CANADA/1


First encounters: Aboriginals and Europeans French and English: accommodating difference from the beginning Confederation 1867 Coming together the British North American colonies for economic and political security Coming apart accommodating French-English difference Development Canada extended from sea to sea to sea, completed 1949

Contemporary Canada
A vast country 10 provinces; three territories. Large variations in population, size, economic base, incomes, population makeup A diverse country: key dimensions -language, region, Aboriginal peoples; multiculturalism A liberal state that blends market economy and social democracy. High rating on UN Human development Index

CONSTITUTIONAL STRUCTURE

Two Key Constitutional Documents


Constitution Act, 1867: establishes a federal and parliamentary system. Canada remains a British country --- independence comes step by step, not from revolution, as US Constitution Act, 1982: The Charter of Rights and Freedoms; amendment formula, patriation (Constitution no longer a British law) Continuing constitutional debate Constitutional Principles: as stated by Supreme Court of Canada, 1998: democracy, constitutionalism and rule of law; federalism; respect for minorities. Deeply ingrained in elite and popular culture

DIVISION OF POWERS BETWEEN OTTAWA AND THE PROVINCES

Peace, Order and Good Government a federal responsibility suggests potential sweeping power for center, but Sections 91 and 92 of the 1867 Constitution set out federal and provincial powers in detail. POGG becomes an emergency power not a general power Watertight compartments only two areas of concurrent powers Reality in 2008 many more areas of concurrency as government has moved into new areas (environment, communications, etc.), or areas once of little concern to government become more important (education, health care)

Logic of Division of powers


Ottawa: foreign affairs and defense; nationbuilding; the economic union (trade and commerce, banking, etc.). Basic responsibility for social security old age pensions, unemployment. Criminal law Provinces: mainly social and cultural matters; education, welfare, health care; infrastructure; much economic regulation, promotion of economic development But no clear distinctions

Constitutional amendment
Until 1982, Canada must ask UK to amend constitution. 1982 Constitution establishes a Canadian amending formula. Most changes require support of federal parliament plus legislatures of 7 provinces with total 50 per cent of population; some require unanimity Makes amendment very difficult No popular ratification

Fiscal Federalism
Provincial proportion of total government revenue and spending highest in world Trend since 1950s greater provincial role Federal government and provinces have virtually identical powers to impose taxes, borrow Intergovernmental transfers important, but smaller than in most federations; fewer conditions than in most federations Equalization a central part of the Confederation bargain High degree of coordination in fiscal policy But current debate over vertical and horizontal fiscal imbalance Federal spending power, allows it to use its resources to influence provincial priorities. Controversial, but vital element of flexibility

Role of Courts
Unified judicial system, federally appointed. To 1949, Canadas highest court in UK UK courts radically re-interpreted Constitution to weaken federal powers, strengthen provinces. Since 1949, Supreme Court has sought to balance federal and provincial powers, and played crucial role in constitutional wars

Change over time


Original division of powers gives wide powers for center to dominate provinces e.g. disallowance and reservation. Canada in 1867 only quasi-federal. Provinces resist federal power; courts re-interpret constitution to limit federal power 1930s depression, World War II, and postwar construction of the welfare state shift power back to Ottawa From 1960s rise of Quebec nationalism, completion of welfare state, and growing importance of areas under provincial jurisdiction all shift power again Today almost all constitutional jurisdictions are shared and concurrent

Intergovernmental Relations
Complex mix of cooperation and competition An informal process: institutions and procedures not set out in law or constitution Intergovernmental agreements set out shared priorities and clarify roles and responsibilities, but have no legal status Two elements: FPT (all three); PT (provinces and territories cooperating) First Ministers, Ministers, and officials meetings and councils Important successes in coordinating policy, but worrying emphasis on turf protection, credit claiming, blame-shifting and buck-passing Worry about the democratic deficit decision-making behind closed doors, little public participation, lack of accountability

Other elements in political system affecting federalism


An electoral system that rewards small, regional parties Result: a regionalized party system; today no truly national party Power concentrated in PM and cabinet: minority regions may feel frozen out A Senate that fails to represent provinces These weaknesses at the center are a major reason for strength of provinces Separated federal and provincial political systems: little mobility of officials and politicians; helps explain competitive relationship. An independent Supreme Court that often plays an important balancing role

The Quebec Debate


Quebec as homeland of French-speaking Canadians Historically argued for provincial power and resisted federal power Modernizing revolution in 1960 leads to growth of Quebec nationalism masters in our own house. Three competing strategies

Quebec options/1
National bilingualism: Strong Quebec representation in government; minority language services across country; focus on individual rights, Canada-wide values Renewed federalism recognition of special role of Quebec; asymmetry; language laws to protect French language Independence, secession: usually linked to association or partnership

Quebec/3
Sovereignist PQ elected 1976, alternates in government since. Referendums, 1980, 1995 (federalism wins by only 44,000 votes. 1998 Supreme Court decision: Quebec has no right under Canadian or international law, but if Quebec votes clearly for secession, then rest of Canada has duty to negotiate Recent developments: Clarity Act; Parliament agrees Quebec is a nation; new government calls for open federalism, responsive to Quebec concerns Most Quebecers have dual identity Quebecer and Canadian

Quebec/4
Quebec sense of nationhood remains But drive for independence has weakened Post-national new world allows for greater flexibility in relation between state and nation Canadian achievement: a debate about very existence of the country conducted peacefully and democratically on both sides

Province-building elsewhere
Other provinces emulate Quebec search for more power See selves as responsible for broad economic and social development, including a greater international role; resist federal intrusions. Extensive provincial innovation, examples: Saskatchewan (public health care); Quebec (child care); B.C. (carbon tax)

Current Issues/1
Quebec: remains central to almost all Canadian debate; lower on the agenda today Oil and gas:
Concentrated in Alberta Provinces own natural resources, gain greatest benefits from royalties, employment, etc. Ottawa has limited powers corporate taxation, exports. Result: rapid growth of Alberta revenues, increases disparities; strains equalization system; threatens manufacturing because of rise of dollar Earlier federal intervention (1970s) creates political crisis. Caution today.

Current issues/2
Aboriginal peoples search for justice Is federalism a template for them: selfgovernment for First Nations? Challenges of size, capacities Multiculturalism: all levels have responsibility to integrate new Canadians, but main solutions lie outside federalism Enhancing transparency, accountability, effectiveness of IGR

CONCLUSION
Began as a Quasi-Federation: Now Is a Genuine Federation Began as a Highly Centralized Federation: Now Is a Highly Decentralized Federation Division of Powers - Began With a System of Watertight Compartments: Now Powers and Responsibilities of Each Order of Government Collide; Entanglement and Competition The Federal Government Had a Paternalistic, Oversight Role at the Beginning: Now Provinces Are Autonomous and Two Orders of Government Are Equally Sovereign in Their Spheres of Jurisdiction Canada Had in 1867 and Still Has Today a Federal System Dominated by the Executive at Both Levels Quebecs Status in the Federation Remains Formally Unresolved, But Life Goes On

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