Whether PM has constitutional duty to fill Senate vacancies is moot: ruling - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 26, 2024, 07:06 PM | Calgary | -7.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Whether PM has constitutional duty to fill Senate vacancies is moot: ruling

A court challenge over a prime minister's right to leave Senate seats vacant indefinitely has been dismissed as moot.

Judge says case is not 'a concrete and significant dispute that demands timely resolution'

Senate appointments are made by the Governor General, currently David Johnston, left, on the advice of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. There are currently 21 vacancies in the 105-seat Senate, that Trudeau says he will fill by the end of the year. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

A court challenge over a prime minister's right to leave Senate seats vacant indefinitely has been dismissed as moot.

The challenge by Vancouver lawyer Aniz Alani was launched in late 2014, when then-prime minister Stephen Harper made it clear he had no intention of filling Senate vacancies.

But Federal Court Justice James O'Reilly says the grounds for Alani's case evaporated once Justin Trudeau became prime minister last fall.

Trudeau created an independent advisory board to recommend non-partisan Senate appointees and has already appointed seven senators under the new process, with plans to fill the remaining 21 vacancies by the end of the year.

Alani had sought a court declaration that the prime minister has a constitutional obligation to fill Senate vacancies within a reasonable time.

Aniz Alani launched this court action at his own expense, and says he isn't tied to any political party or organization. (Twitter)

Regardless of the change in government and approach, he had argued that it's still important for the court to clarify whether the prime minister has absolute discretion to fill Senate vacancies when or if he chooses.

O'Reilly disagreed.

"The case before me is inextricably connected to the moratorium on Senate appointments announced by the former prime minister," he said in a ruling released Thursday.

"That moratorium is clearly over. There is no live controversy remaining between the parties. Mr. Alani's case is moot."

No need for 'timely resolution'

O'Reilly further ordered Alani to pay the government's legal costs.

The justice did not rule on the merits of Alani's case, saying that would have required "weeks of analysis and writing" time that could be better spent on cases where there is "a concrete and significant dispute that demands timely resolution."

"In addition, it is hard to see a significant social cost that the Canadian public would bear if the question Mr. Alani has raised went unanswered for now," O'Reilly added.

"Given the current circumstances, an answer may not be needed for several years, if ever."

Harper stopped appointing senators in March 2013, amid the Senate expenses scandal; there were 22 vacancies in the 105-seat chamber by the time Harper's Conservatives lost power last October. More seats have since fallen vacant as senators have retired.