The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Side 50

The Icelandic Canadian - 01.12.1964, Side 50
48 THE ICELANDIC CANADIAN Winter 1964 of his followers. Finally, armed con- flict broke out in Upper and Lower Canada, but it was quickly and brutal- ly crushed. However, in 1841, a new constitution made it possible for the cabinet members to be chosen from among the elected representatives. In 1848, the parliament of a united Can- ada saw the majority Reformist party called to form a government. The principle of responsible government was granted in 1849 and indemnities were voted to the victims of the 1837 rebellion. Lord Elgin, Governor-Gen- eral of Canada, gave his assent to the indemnities legislation over the ob- jection of royalists who felt the Can- adian parliament’s action should be subject to Royal assent in England. The outbreak of the American Civil War in 1861, and the attacks on Can- adian soil by bands of Fenians (Irish revolutionists) operating from the United States, were a background for mounting talks of setting up a Con- federation of English colonies in Can- ada. A constitution was drafted by Eng- lish and French speaking represent- atives, submitted to the British Parli- ament, and adopted under the title of the British North America Act. Quebec accepted Confederation but saw in it essentially a decentralized form of federalism. On the other hand, the federal authorities, led by Sir John A MacDonald, maintained that the ef- fect of the Act was to place the prov- inces in a position of satellites of the central government. Writing in the Canadian Bar Re- view’s complete issue of “Nationhood and the Constitution” (1951), Louis- Philippe Pigeon, prominent Quebec lawyer, quotes the Judicial Committee of the Imperial Privy Council in sup- port of the Quebec view. Rendering a decision in a case involving the feder- al authorities and the government of New Brunswick, the Imperial Court of final resort wrote: “The Federal gov- ernment maintained that the effect of the BNA Act has been to sever all connections between the Crown and the provinces and to make the govern- ment of the Dominion the only gov- ernment of Her Majesty in North Am- erica; and 4o reduce the provinces to the rank of independent municipal institutions. For these propositions . . . their Lordships have been unable to find either principle or authority . . . and a Lieutenant-Governor is as much the representative of Her Majesty for all purposes of provincial government as the Govenor-General himself is for all purposes of Dominion govern- ment.” Mr. Pigeon concludes his article with this observation: “A great volume of criticism has been heaped upon the Privy Council and the Supreme Court on the ground that their decisions rest on a narrow and technical construction of the BNA Act. This contention is ill- founded. They recognize the implicit fluidity of any constitution by allow- ing for emergencies . . . they staunch- ly refuse to let our federal government be changed gradually, by one device or another, to a legislative union. In do- ing so, they are preserving the essential condition of the Canadian Confeder- ation.” j

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