Canadian Federalist Experiment: From Defiant Monarchy to Reluctant Republic

Capa
McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2003 - 225 páginas
Frederick Vaughan details how the fathers of Confederation, defiantly determined to perpetuate monarchical government despite Enlightenment philosophy that insisted that republicanism was the only legitimate form of government, embraced the Hobbesean principles of the English constitution and embedded them in the new Canadian constitution in 1867, leading to concentration of power in the office of the prime minister. He then argues that Trudeau's 1992 Charter quietly undermined the monarchic character of the constitution by introducing republican principles of government. The result has been old institutional structures at odds with the republican ambitions, leaving Canada clinging to the wreckage of the old aristocratic order while attempting to provide a new order founded on republican equality. Vaughan shows how, at the time of Confederation, Edward Freeman convinced John A. Macdonald to experiment with what no one had ever heard of before, a monarchic federation, and Jean-Louis DeLolme, a popular French authority on the English constitution, helped forge a new federal constitution with a strong central government and a chief executive armed with the powers necessary to govern
 

Conteúdo

From Royal Prerogative to Responsible Government
22
The Foundations of Eddystone
49
An Object Much to be Desired
76
The Ambiguous Embrace of Federalism
91
The Courts and the Rise of Judicial Power
115
A Nation of Christians
134
The Charter Court and the Decline of Parliament
152
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