Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Canadian premiers are too quick to override rights, former PM Jean Chrétien warns

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Nov, 2025 09:49 AM
  • Canadian premiers are too quick to override rights, former PM Jean Chrétien warns

Canada's premiers are too quick to use the notwithstanding clause for "marginal reasons" and have lost sight of its original purpose, former prime minister Jean Chrétien said Wednesday evening. 

Chrétien, who as justice minister negotiated the clause's inclusion in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1981, said provinces are using it "for anything" 40 years later.

"It was not designed for that. It was designed (for) when there was a court going too far, politicians can intervene," he said of the provision, which gives legislatures the ability to override certain portions of the Charter for up to five years. 

"That worries me very, very much."

He did not share specifics. Last week, Alberta invoked the clause to force striking teachers back to work. Quebec, Ontario and Saskatchewan have also used it in recent years.

In wide-ranging remarks at a Journalists for Human Rights event in Toronto, the former prime minister also shared concerns about the state of democracy around the globe, especially in the United States.

Speaking on the one-year anniversary of U.S. President Donald Trump being elected for a second term, Chrétien said it was a "very bad sign" that the president has moved to deploy National Guard troops in several major U.S. cities to quell protests.

Chrétien, 91, said he doesn't call to offer prime ministers advice, saying he doesn’t want to be the "Monday morning quarterback."

But asked how he would respond to tariffs imposed by the Trump administration and the president's threats of annexation, he said Canada has to step up. Alluding to the current government of Prime Minister Mark Carney, Chrétien said: "I'm quite happy with the present situation."

The former prime minister shared that he had breakfast with former U.S. president Bill Clinton on Wednesday morning, and that Clinton was in a good mood after a victorious night for the Democrats in a slate of elections on Tuesday, including the election of Zohran Mamdani as mayor of New York City. 

Chrétien said he took the results as a positive sign that Americans are paying attention to what's happening. 

In conversation with former CTV anchor Lisa Laflamme days after the 30th anniversary of the Quebec referendum, the former prime minister recalled how Clinton had supported Canadian unity at the time. 

He also retold the story from the night of an assassination attempt, a few days after the referendum on Nov. 5, 1995. 

"In the middle of the night, my wife said to me, 'There's a stranger in the house,'" he said. She described the man as wearing a toque and gloves, and "he looked like Forrest Gump." 

The man, who would later be found guilty of attempted murder but not criminally responsible due to a mental disorder, had gotten past security at 24 Sussex Drive, the prime minister's official residence in Ottawa. 

Chrétien said his wife, Aline, locked the door and they stood together armed with a statue until police arrived. He said she saved his life.

"She was a great influence on me, and it was (a) very, very good partnership," he said. 

Chrétien told LaFlamme he credits Aline, who died in September 2020, for keeping Canada out of the Iraq War when it began in 2003.

"It was because of her," he said, explaining that it was his wife who convinced him to run for a third term as prime minister, and he believed other candidates for the job would have bent to immense pressure from the U.S. to join its campaign.

Drawing on a long memory of geopolitical relationships, Chrétien said he feels Canada has lost ground internationally. At this juncture, which he described as the "decline of the American empire," it's important to restore relationships across the world, he said. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Eduardo Lima

MORE National ARTICLES

Some of the best-known Canadian UFO sightings over the years

Some of the best-known Canadian UFO sightings over the years
Oct. 4, 1967, Shag Harbour, N.S.: Witnesses reported seeing a row of lights descending and entering the water. Emergency crews, including the RCMP and the Coast Guard, responded under the assumption of a plane crash, but no wreckage was found. 

Some of the best-known Canadian UFO sightings over the years

Canadian Union of Postal Workers urges workers to reject contract offer

Canadian Union of Postal Workers urges workers to reject contract offer
A strong no vote would not only reject the offer, but also protect the integrity of the bargaining process, union national president Jan Simpson wrote in a Thursday letter to members. 

Canadian Union of Postal Workers urges workers to reject contract offer

Canada, New Zealand settle trade dispute regarding supply management of dairy sector

Canada, New Zealand settle trade dispute regarding supply management of dairy sector
The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership includes certain quotas for countries to export dairy at preferred tariff rates into other member countries.

Canada, New Zealand settle trade dispute regarding supply management of dairy sector

Mother of girl with rare disease says "nightmare is over" after B.C. restores funding

Mother of girl with rare disease says
Charleigh Pollock is the only person in B.C. to have Batten disease, and her mother Jori Fales says in a social post that she is "beyond grateful" for "all the beautiful humans that have moved mountains" for her daughter.

Mother of girl with rare disease says "nightmare is over" after B.C. restores funding

Premier criticizes report that says Alberta hindered efforts to fight Jasper fire

Premier criticizes report that says Alberta hindered efforts to fight Jasper fire
“It is disheartening to see a report and the media response to that report that so clearly overlooks the substantial, coordinated efforts undertaken by the Alberta government during the Jasper wildfire,” Smith wrote Friday on social media.

Premier criticizes report that says Alberta hindered efforts to fight Jasper fire

Derailment in Abbotsford, B.C., closes road near Sumas border

Derailment in Abbotsford, B.C., closes road near Sumas border
The department says in a post to social media that the road is blocked off between West Railway to the commercial vehicle entrance for the Sumas border crossing.

Derailment in Abbotsford, B.C., closes road near Sumas border