David Schneiderman
are harder to predict than in the United States.
27
Songer et al. maintain, never-
theless, that ideology and attitude play a role, particularly in criminal appeals.
28
Even if the strategic model has prompted only a handful of scholarly stud-
ies, it may have more explanatory force.
29
That is, the Court will issue rea-
sons in some cases that are better explained with reference to the institutional
environment in which the Court operates in particular, its relationship to the
political branches, both national and sub-national. Former Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau, for instance, explained the Supreme Court’s historic deci-
sion in the Patriation Reference in strategic terms.
30
The Court ruled that
Trudeau’s federal government could not unilaterally bring the Constitution
home from Britain without offending a constitutional convention, that of
securing “substantial” provincial consent beforehand. The majority’s ruling,
Trudeau complained, long after he left office, left “little doubt that the major-
ity judges had set their minds to delivering a judgment that would force the
federal and the provincial governments to seek a compromise.”
31
Knopff et al.
claim that in a series of high profile but “jurisprudentially suspect” decisions,
including the Patriation and Secession References, strategic decision-making
is the only plausible explanation for their results.
32
Sauvageau et al. suggest
that the Supreme Court’s opinion in R. v. Marshall (No. 2)
33
can only be
explained as a means of mollifying the indignation that was directed at the
Court as a consequence of its ruling in Marshall (No. 1), which seemingly
expanded the scope of Indigenous rights across Atlantic Canada.
34
Johnson’s
study of Supreme Court decision-making in the period prior to 1949, at which
27
Benjamin Alarie and Andrew Green, “Should They All Just Get Along? Judicial Ideology,
Collegiality and Appointments to the Supreme Court of Canada” (2008) 58 University of New
Brunswick LJ 73, 74.
28
Donald R. Songer, Susan W. Johnston, C. L. Ostberg and Matthew W. Wetstein, Law, Ide-
ology, and Collegiality: Judicial Behaviour in the Supreme Court of Canada (Montreal and
Kingston: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2012) 152.
29
See discussion in Emmett Macfarlane, Governing from the Bench: The Supreme Court of Can-
ada and the Judicial Role (Vancouver: UBC Press, 2013) 30.
30
Reference re Resolution to Amend the Constitution of Canada [1981] 1 SCR 753.
31
Pierre Elliott Trudeau, “Convocation Speech at the Opening of the Bora Laskin Law Library”
(1991) 41 University of Toronto LJ 295, 302.
32
Rainer Knopff, Dennis Baker and Sylvia LeRoy, “Courting Controversy: Strategic Judicial
Decision Making” in James B. Kelly and Christopher P. Manfredi (eds.), Contested Consti-
tutionalism: Reflections on the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Vancouver: UBC
Press, 2009) 67, referring to Reference re Resolution to Amend the Constitution of Canada (note
30) and Reference re Secession of Quebec (note 14).
33
R v. Marshall [1999] 3 SCR 456.
34
R v. Marshall [1999] 3 S.C.R. 533. See discussion in Florian Sauvageau, David Schneiderman
and David Taras, The Last Word: Media Coverage of the Supreme Court of Canada (Vancouver:
UBC Press 2006) 165; Vuk Radmilovic, “A Strategic Approach to Judicial Legitimacy: Supreme
Court of Canada and the Marshall Case” (2010) 15 Review of Constitutional Studies 77.
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