The 'Canada Act 1982' (1982 c. 11) is an
Act of Parliament passed by the
British Parliament that severed all remaining legislative dependence of
Canada on the
United Kingdom, in a process known as "
patriation". It contains the text of the
Constitution Act, 1982, in both of Canada's official languages, in Schedule B, and a translation of the main body into French in Schedule A, making it the first British Act of Parliament since medieval times to be in both
English and
French.
History
Canada's road to political self government began with the British North America Act, 1867 (now called in Canada the "
Constitution Act, 1867," although it is still often referred to by its British name, or simply the "BNA Act"). This act created the modern state of Canada by combining the
Province of Canada (now
Ontario and
Quebec),
Nova Scotia, and
New Brunswick into a
dominion within the
British Empire. From this
Canada adopted a
Westminster style government with a Parliament. A
Governor General fulfilled the constitutional duties of the British
Sovereign on Canadian soil.
Despite this, the United Kingdom still had the power to legislate for Canada. The
Statute of Westminster 1931 removed this power of the British Parliament for Canada, as well as the other
British Dominions (
Australia, the
Irish Free State,
New Zealand,
Union of South Africa, and
Newfoundland), save where the Dominion consented to Imperial legislation. Also, the
British North America (No. 2) Act 1949 was passed by the British Parliament, giving the
Canadian Parliament significant constitutional amending powers. However, an Act of the ''British'' Parliament was still required to make some amendments in the Canadian constitution.
This delay in repatriating the Canadian constitution was due in large part to the lack of agreement over a mechanism for amending the constitution that would be acceptable to all of the provinces, particularly Quebec.
Enactment of the Act
The Canada Act was the last request of the Canadian government to amend the country's constitution. After unpromising negotiations with the provincial governments,
Pierre Trudeau eventually came to hope that the federal Parliament could unilaterally patriate the constitution, but the
Supreme Court of Canada ruled in the ''
Patriation Reference'' that a substantial level of consent from the provinces was needed according to constitutional conventions (though not in law). Trudeau succeeded in convincing nine provinces out of ten by adding the
Notwithstanding Clause to limit the application of the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Aside from some objections from British MPs who protested Canada's past mistreatment of Quebec and Aboriginal peoples (as recalled with frustration by
Jean Chrétien in his memoirs ''Straight from the Heart''), there was little opposition from the British government to passing the Act. Through section 2 of the Canada Act 1982, the United Kingdom ended its involvement in further amendments to the Canadian constitution.
Proclamation by the Queen of Canada
Whilst the Canada Act 1982 received the
Royal Assent on
March 29,
1982 in London, it was not until the Queen came to Canada that the
Constitution Act, 1982, its Canadian equivalent, was proclaimed by
letters patent as a
statutory instrument by the Queen during her presence in Canada.
The Constitution Act 1982 was signed into law by Elizabeth II as
Queen of Canada on a rainy
April 17,
1982 on
Parliament Hill in
Ottawa. Queen Elizabeth remains Queen and
Head of State of Canada to this day. Her constitutional powers over Canada were not affected by the Act. Canada has full
sovereignty over its realm and the Queen's role is separate from her role as the British monarch.
See also
★
Australia Act 1986
★
New Zealand Constitution Act 1986
External links
★
Full text of the Constitution Act, 1982 including the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
★
Canada and the Constitution Act
★
Table of Constitutional Documents