TORONTO – Ontario‘s top court has upheld a provincial law that slashed the size of Toronto’s city council nearly in half last year, saying the unexpected move did not interfere with candidates’ or voters’ ability to express themselves freely.
In a split decision, the Ontario court of appeal sided Thursday with Premier Doug Ford in his dispute with the City of Toronto, which had challenged his unprecedented intervention in the 2018 municipal election.
The right to free expression under section 2b of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms does not amount to a right to effective or successful expression, Justice Bradley Miller wrote for the majority of the appeal panel.
“The frustration of candidates in facing altered electoral circumstances – unanticipated rivals, losing allies, and needing to reach new voters – did not prevent them from saying anything they wished to say about matters in issue in the election or in promoting their candidacies,” he wrote.
“The submissions of the city and some of the intervenors make the error of implausibly characterizing every negative impact on the candidates as an interference with expression.”
Two judges dissented, however, finding the law did in fact interfere with the free-expression rights of candidates and should be struck down.
The government’s decision to dramatically reduce city council during an election campaign “left a trail of devastation of basic democratic principles in its wake,” Justice James MacPherson wrote.
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“By extinguishing almost half of the city’s existing wards midway through an active election, Ontario blew up the efforts, aspirations and campaign materials of hundreds of aspiring candidates, and the reciprocal engagement of many informed voters. This infringement of s.2(b) was extensive, profound, and seemingly without precedent in Canadian history.”
The 3-2 split increases the likelihood the Supreme Court of Canada will have to weigh in on the issue.
The province said it was pleased with the ruling but would not comment further given the possibility of further appeal.
The city, meanwhile, said it would review the decision, but noted council had earlier directed staff to seek leave to appeal to the country’s highest court if necessary.
“I have opposed and continue to oppose the provincial government’s actions on this matter – they were unfair, unnecessary and unprecedented. As I have said many times, you don’t just change the rules of an election in the middle of an election,” Mayor John Tory said in a statement.
“I believe this case continues to be important as a means of helping to limit future intrusions of a similar nature in the absence of constitutional change.”
Ford brought in the Better Local Government Act, better known as Bill 5, partway through last year’s municipal election campaign, cutting the number of council seats to 25 from 47. The law passed in August, roughly two months before the October vote.
At the time, Ford – a former Toronto city councillor and failed mayoral candidate – said the move would improve decision-making and save $25 million. Critics, however, accused him of political interference and flouting democracy.
The city turned to the court for relief, and a lower court found the law unconstitutional, saying it infringed on the free-expression rights of candidates by affecting their ability to campaign, and those of voters by denying them the right to cast a ballot that could result in effective representation.
Ford set off another wave of outrage when he threatened to invoke the notwithstanding clause in light of the ruling. The province then won a stay of the ruling pending the outcome of its appeal, and the election went ahead with 25 wards.
The city had asked the appeal court to confirm the lower court’s findings but to leave the results of the municipal election as is until the next vote in 2022.
In its ruling Thursday, the appeal court said the lower court had misconstrued the meaning of section 2b of the charter by expanding it “from a guarantee of freedom from government interference with expression to a guarantee that government action would not impact the effectiveness of that expression in achieving its intended purpose.”
It also said the province was within its rights to reshape city council.
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“Although it is framed as a matter of protecting freedom of expression in the context of a municipal election, in reality the applicants’ complaint concerns the timing of the legislature’s decision to change the composition of City Council, a change that is undeniably within the legitimate authority of the legislature,” Miller wrote.
“The applicants’ complaint has been clothed in the language of s. 2(b) of the Charter to invite judicial intervention in what is essentially a political matter. There is no legitimate basis for the court to accept this invitation.”
Thursday’s ruling prompted some politicians to call for measures to protect municipalities from such changes in the future.
Ontario NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said in a statement she has put forward legislation to ensure “the province does not ride roughshod over local decision-making.”
Toronto Coun. Joe Cressy, meanwhile, said on Twitter it was time to change policies so the city is no longer “simply a creature of the province.”