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[Canada] Canadian Politics Redux

Started by Josephus, March 22, 2011, 09:27:34 PM

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crazy canuck

It is rare for our courts to make public comments.  The Chief Justices in Alberta have felt the need to do so after the Premier of Alberta mused publicly about "directing" the courts.  Here is the Chief Justices' public statement in full

QuoteStatement from the Chief Justices
Jan 27, 2026
 

As proud Albertans, we care deeply about this province and the people of Alberta.

The judges on Alberta's three courts—the Court of Justice, the Court of King's Bench and the Court of Appeal—recognize that our fundamental role is to serve Albertans. We do this by upholding our oath of office to decide each case honestly, impartially, and to the best of our ability. We know that our decisions can profoundly impact the people who come before the courts. We take this responsibility seriously.

A properly functioning democracy requires three separate branches of government that exercise their power and authority independently according to the Constitution.

The executive branch makes policy and manages government operations. The legislative branch makes laws. In turn, the judicial branch interprets and applies those laws to disputes brought before the courts. If a party requests it, judges may be required to interpret and apply the Constitution and the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and make a ruling.

The independence of each branch ensures there are checks and balances across the system. It is the foundation of a healthy democracy. Public trust and confidence in our institutions—and all three branches of government—depend on it. It is equally important that each branch respect and support the independence of the others.

Independence of the judicial branch protects the public. It ensures judges can make decisions based solely on the law and evidence presented. It frees judges from pressure or influence from external sources including the governments that appoint us.

Each day in Alberta's courthouses, judges apply the law—to protect individual rights, decide disputes fairly and hold parties, including governments, accountable. The rule of law means no one is above the law, everyone is treated equally before the law, and power is not used arbitrarily. Alberta's judges will continue to do this work faithfully.

Alberta's judges are Albertans, like the people we serve. We are proud of the work judges and staff do every day to protect the rights of all Albertans and to safeguard our democracy.

 

Dawn Pentelechuk
Acting Chief Justice of Alberta


Kent H. Davidson
Chief Justice
King's Bench of Alberta         


James A. Hunter
Chief Justice
Alberta Court of Justice
Awarded 17 Zoupa points

In several surveys, the overwhelming first choice for what makes Canada unique is multiculturalism. This, in a world collapsing into stupid, impoverishing hatreds, is the distinctly Canadian national project.

Jacob


HVC

Good statement, and I understand why they didn't, but I wish they called her out in the statement.
Being lazy is bad; unless you still get what you want, then it's called "patience".
Hubris must be punished. Severely.

Valmy

Quote from: Grey Fox on Today at 01:48:54 PMI chack it to his dislike for nationalism and he found out the Duplessis government was pretty anti-jewish.

I also dislike nationalists but I have come to...sort of get why Quebec is the way it is. Even if I don't necessarily like it.

Certainly not J.J. McCullough type disliking it though  :ph34r:

I mean they could have ended up like Louisiana and had French banished to a few rural backwaters as their culture got annihilated by the great Anglo cultural juggernaut. That happened. So I get it.
Quote"This is a Russian warship. I propose you lay down arms and surrender to avoid bloodshed & unnecessary victims. Otherwise, you'll be bombed."

Zmiinyi defenders: "Russian warship, go fuck yourself."