, para. 67.
530
David Schneiderman
institution representative of the provinces.
66
The Conservative government
promised to initiate a process that would transform Canada’s upper house into
an elected body but without amending the Constitution. This was a problem,
as the “method of selecting Senators” was contemplated by the amending
formula, requiring substantial provincial consent (s. 42[1]).
67
A federal scheme
was introduced that would authorize, in consultation with willing provinces,
the holding of elections from which persons could then be appointed to sit in
the Senate (in addition to limiting their tenure from eight- to nine-year terms).
Federal lawyers argued that this did not amount to an amendment requir-
ing provincial consent, a position with which only two intervening provinces
agreed. All others insisted that such a change could not be initiated without
their participation.
The Supreme Court of Canada agreed that provincial consent was required
(it should be acknowledged, which the Court did not, that the federal scheme
could not have succeeded without provincial cooperation). The Court was not
content merely to rest its opinion on the text of the amending formula – which
would have sufficed – and, instead, invoked the “basic structure” and “funda-
mental nature” of the Constitution. Changes to the Senate’s “fundamental
nature” that would “fundamentally alter the architecture of the Constitution
required provincial consent.” The Court was not willing to accept the argu-
ment that consultative elections preserved discretion in whom the Prime
Minister appoints. The argument, they wrote, “privilege[d] form over sub-
stance.”
68
“While the provisions regarding appointment of senators remain
textually untouched,” the Court continued, “the Senate’s fundamental nature
and role as a complementary legislative body of sober second thought would
be significantly altered.”
69
The Court thereby informed its interpretation of
text with reference to structure. Here is how the Court described its method:
“The assumptions that underlie the text and the manner in which the consti-
tutional provisions are intended to interact with one another must inform our
interpretation, understanding, and application of the text.”
70
It is hard to explain the ruling’s repeated non-textual references to “basic struc-
ture” and “fundamental nature” in light of the amending formula command
66
David Schneiderman,
Red, White and Kind of Blue? The Conservatives and the Americaniza-
tion of Canadian Constitutional Culture (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2015) 191–5.
67
The general amending formula is required for amendments concerning “the method of select-
ing Senators,” requiring, at a minimum, the consent of seven out of ten provinces representing
more than 50 percent of the Canadian population.
68
Reference re Senate Reform [2014] 1 SCR 704 para. 52.
69
Reference re Senate Reform,
ibid.
, para. 60.
70
Ibid.
, para. 26.