The CQDE co-leads call to withdraw anti-democratic exemption powers from Bill C-15

Letter to Federal Parliamentarians to Remove “Henry the VIII” Exemption Powers from Budget Bill C-15.

More than a hundred prominent law and human rights experts, labour, sector leaders and civil society organizations warn the proposed amendments to the Red Tape Reduction Act in Bill C-15 set Canada on a dangerous anti-democratic track.

Dear Members of Parliament:

The resilience of Canadian democracy and the rule of law is not unshakeable. It is fragile and precious, and it is arguably the most pivotal tool we can wield to protect ourselves and our communities when both our sovereignty and economy are under threat. Yet, Bill C-15, which the federal government has espoused as its answer to the economic attacks that Canada is facing, contains a major threat to the very constitutional underpinning that ensures a thriving democratic governance system.

Buried on page 300 of a more than 600-page long budget implementation bill is a constitutional abomination. Part 5, Division 5 of this bill introduces draconian powers that allow federal ministers to exempt any individual, company or government (including its own federal departments) from the application of any federal law or regulation. No legislation is safe, except the Criminal Code. Not our labour standards. Not our health and safety regulations. Not laws that uphold Indigenous rights and sovereignty. Not environmental protection laws. And not even laws that protect our security and privacy.

These “Henry the VIII” powers — which refer to the ability of the executive (here, ministers) to unilaterally change an act of Parliament — are an affront to the separation of powers: the constitutional architecture that ensures a system where Parliament makes laws, the executive implements them, and the courts interpret them. This balance is a hallmark of a thriving Canadian democracy and one that will define how we as a country resist a troubling trend of democratic decline that we observe around the world.

As many legal experts asserted in testimonies and submissions in the Parliamentary and Senate committee hearings on Bill C-15, the proposed changes to the Red Tape Reduction Act cannot be characterized as “regulatory sandboxing.” They are in fact a dramatic departure from the common regulatory sandbox approach in Canadian law, which temporarily creates targeted, tightly controlled and highly transparent environments that enable the testing of new technologies to better understand their impacts — including how to regulate them. If passed, the amended Red Tape Reduction Act would introduce vague and overbroad notions like “competitiveness” and “economic growth” as legitimate reasons for exemptions from any Act of Parliament. Left for the interpretation of the minister that wants to wield them, these terms can mean anything.

These exemption powers do not streamline regulation — they dynamite the rule of law itself by creating a two-tier legislative system whereby laws debated and enacted by Parliament can be suspended for political convenience with little to no accountability or transparency.

We call on you to stand up for Canada’s democratic tradition and advocate for the removal of Part 5, Division 5 of Bill C-15. These powers, if passed, have the potential to undermine decades of law-making by Parliament and suspend laws that were intentionally designed by you and your colleagues — past and present — to protect our families, our public health, our security, the air that we breathe, our iconic endangered species, and issues that your constituents cherish. They will set Canada on the wrong path toward a weaker Parliamentary democracy, with potentially catastrophic implications.

We urge you to stand up for the Parliament and people you serve. Stand up for the rule of law. Stand up for the constitutional order that can protect our democracy.

Remove Part 5, Division 5 from Bill C-15.

List of signatories:

  1. Canadian Civil Liberties Association
  2. CQDE – Centre québécois du droit de l’environnement
  3. Ecojustice
  4. David Asper – Centre for Constitutional Rights
  5. Canadian Labour Congress
  6. Alex Neve, O.C., Senior Fellow, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Ottawa
  7. Jennifer Quaid, Professeure titulaire, Section de droit civil, Université d’Ottawa
  8. Human Rights Watch
  9. Canadian Public Health Association
  10. International Civil Liberties Monitoring Group
  11. Iranian Canadian Legal Professionals (ICLP)
  12. Democracy Watch
  13. Jamie Cameron, Professor Emerita
  14. James L Turk, Director, Centre for Free Expression
  15. Penelope Simons, Professor, Common Law and Director of the Human Rights Research and Education Centre
  16. Ladan Mehranvar, Senior Legal Researcher, Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment
  17. Egale Canada
  18. National Farmers Union
  19. Arab Canadian Lawyers Association
  20. Action cancer du sein du Québec
  21. BC Freedom of Information and Privacy Association
  22. West Coast Environmental Law Association
  23. Dr. Angela Cameron, Associate Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa Canadian
  24. Environmental Law Association
  25. Équiterre
  26. Alain Branchaud, Directeur général, SNAP Québec
  27. East Coast Environmental Law
  28. Grand Riverkeeper Labrador
  29. Legal Advocates for Nature’s Defence
  30. David Suzuki Foundation
  31. Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment – Ontario Committee
  32. Environmental Defence Canada
  33. Canadian Council for Refugees
  34. Greenpeace Canada
  35. Caroline Brouillette, Climate Action Network Canada
  36. Nature Canada
  37. Travailleuses et travailleurs pour la justice climatique / Workers for climate justice
  38. Laurence Guénette, Ligue des droits et libertés
  39. OpenMedia
  40. Gavin Pitchford, CEO, Delta Management Group/Clean50
  41. Front commun québécois pour une gestion écologique des déchets
  42. Citizens’ Climate Lobby Canada
  43. For Our Kids, Burnaby
  44. Justice For Migrant Workers
  45. Living Oceans Society
  46. Tylene Appel and Alan Silverman, Seniors for Climate Action Now!
  47. Climate Justice Saskatoon
  48. Friends of the Earth Canada
  49. Climate Legacy
  50. Dr. Trevor Hancock, Emeritus Professor of Public Health and Social Policy, University of Victoria
  51. Christopher Campbell-Duruflé, Assistant Professor, Lincoln Alexander School of Law, Toronto Metropolitan University
  52. Gareth Gransaull, re•generation
  53. Canadian Interfaith Fast For the Climate
  54. Slovenian Home Association
  55. Decolonial Solidarity
  56. Mères au front
  57. 350 Canada
  58. Calgary Climate Hub
  59. The ENRICH Project
  60. Above Ground (a project of MakeWay)
  61. Prevent Cancer Now
  62. Dr. Geoffrey Strong, Retired Atmospheric/Climate Scientist
  63. Ecology Action Centre
  64. Canadian Anti-Monopoly Project (CAMP)
  65. Council of Canadians
  66. Grandmothers Act to Save the Planet (GASP)
  67. Prevent Cancer Now
  68. Mères au front-Outaouais
  69. Second Wind Liberation
  70. Leadnow
  71. Daniel Mockle, Professeur de droit public, Faculté de Science politique et de Droit, UQAM
  72. Rebecca MacLeod, Executive Director, New Grocery Movement
  73. Alliance 4 Democracy/Sunshine Coast Seniors for Climate Action Now
  74. Climate Action for Lifelong Learners (CALL)
  75. MiningWatch Canada
  76. Canadian Association of Nurses for the Environment
  77. Avalon/NL chapter, Council of Canadians
  78. Lindsay McLaren, Professor, Department of Community Health Sciences, University of Calgary
  79. Camille Fréchette, lawyer
  80. Environmental Justice & Sustainability Clinic, Osgoode Hall Law School
  81. Fondation Rivières
  82. Rébecca Pétrin, Directrice générale, Eau Secours
  83. Citizens for Public Justice (CPJ)
  84. SeaChoice
  85. Teachers for Future Turtle Island
  86. Touwendé Roland Ouedraogo, Chargé de cours à l’UQAM et à l’UdeM
  87. BCTF Divest Now
  88. Inter Pares
  89. Stand.earth
  90. Shift: Action for Pension Wealth & Planet Health (A project of Makeway)
  91. Canadian Network on Corporate Accountability /Réseau canadien sur la reddition de compte des entreprises
  92. Vigilance OGM
  93. Canadian Health Association for Sustainability and Equity (CHASE)
  94. Anne-Josée Laquerre, Directrice générale et co-initiatrice, Québec Net Positif
  95. Touch Grass Club
  96. Alexandre Lillo, Professeur – Département des sciences juridiques (UQÀM)
  97. Elisabeth Patterson, avocate et associée, Dionne Schulze
  98. Cédric Gagnon-Ducharme, Avocat
  99. Dr. Alexandra Pedersen, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Queen’s University
  100. Manitoba Eco-Network Inc.
  101. Zero Waste BC
  102. Kate Petriw, Communications and Narratives Co-Lead, Wellbeing Economy Alliance (Canada)