Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Jagmeet Singh: NDP Considering Pledge To Do Away With So-called Peremptory Challenges

The Canadian Press, 13 Feb, 2018 11:57 AM
    OTTAWA — NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he is considering whether his party should push to abolish the use of so-called peremptory challenges in the jury selection process.
     
     
    The practice, which allows Crown and defence lawyers to exclude jurors without offering reasons, is at the centre of the controversy raging over the acquittal of Gerald Stanley.
     
     
    Stanley, a Saskatchewan farmer, was acquitted last week of second-degree murder in the 2016 shooting death of Colten Boushie, 22, a member of the Red Pheasant First Nation.
     
     
    Singh says peremptory challenges can result in a jury that doesn't accurately reflect the entire community, and that it's time to talk about whether they should be allowed at all.
     
     
    He made the comments as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was to meet Boushie's grieving family members, who are in Ottawa to talk about what they consider a travesty of justice.
     
     
    A criminal defence lawyer before entering politics, Singh says he used peremptory challenges in jury selection when he was in practice.
     
     
    "I've looked at this and I'm considering whether we should take a position on abolishing peremptory challenges," he told a news conference.
     
     
    "I haven't made that decision yet, but it's definitely a discussion we need to have."
     
     
    Such a discussion, Singh continued, "creates an opportunity to talk about how do we make a jury that truly reflective of the people, that increases confidence in our justice system, that gives us results that we can have faith in."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Officials Separate Couple After 73 Years: 'I Listened To My Mother Weep'

    Officials Separate Couple After 73 Years: 'I Listened To My Mother Weep'
    Herbert and Audrey Goodine gave each other a peck on the lips and said goodbye Monday, moments before Herbert was driven to a new care residence about 45 minutes away.

    Officials Separate Couple After 73 Years: 'I Listened To My Mother Weep'

    Synagogues In Four Cities Receive Anti-Semitic Hate Mail

    Synagogues In Four Cities Receive Anti-Semitic Hate Mail
    MONTREAL — B'nai Brith Canada says at least five synagogues across the country have received anti-Semitic hate mail.

    Synagogues In Four Cities Receive Anti-Semitic Hate Mail

    Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November

    Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November
    OTTAWA — A decision by the Trump administration to yank protected status for thousands of Haitians doesn't appear to have prompted a new surge of asylum seekers at the Canada-U.S. border.

    Latest Stats Show Illegal Border Crossings Continued To Decline In November

    Bad Weather Sets Off B.C. Highway Crashes, Sending Four To Hospital

    Bad Weather Sets Off B.C. Highway Crashes, Sending Four To Hospital
     Four people were taken to hospital after a series of collisions on Highway 5 south of Merritt, B.C., as weather conditions deteriorate on the route.

    Bad Weather Sets Off B.C. Highway Crashes, Sending Four To Hospital

    Former B.C. Fire Chief Found Not Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Volunteers

    Former B.C. Fire Chief Found Not Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Volunteers
    The jury reached the verdicts Saturday in the case of Robert Harold Bennett after deliberating for 3 1/2 days at the courthouse in Prince George.

    Former B.C. Fire Chief Found Not Guilty Of Sexually Assaulting Volunteers

    Crash Kills One Person, Injures Two More On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge

    Crash Kills One Person, Injures Two More On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge
    Vancouver police confirm the fatality and say two others were seriously hurt when two vehicles collided on the Burrard Street Bridge just after 1 a.m.

    Crash Kills One Person, Injures Two More On Vancouver's Burrard Bridge