http://www.torontosun.com/2011/12/08/farmers-bound-to-ludicrous-wheat-law
Farmers bound to ludicrous wheat law
By Brian Lilley,Parliamentary Bureau
You know, I thought that people on the left were against sending people to jail and wanted to make sure we didn’t overcrowd our prisons.
Their reaction to Wednesday’s court ruling on the Canadian Wheat Board makes it look like they support jailing farmers, but not criminals.
Justice Douglas Campbell, a Chretien appointee to the Federal Court, ruled on Wednesday that the government was breaking the law by not having western wheat and barley farmers vote before ending the monopoly of the Canadian Wheat Board.
Right now, any farmer on the Prairies who sells wheat or barley to anyone but the wheat board can be fined and sent to prison for up to two years.
And farmers have gone to jail for selling wheat and barley, or in the case of Jim Chatenay, donating it to a 4-H club in Montana. The Liberal agriculture minister at the time, Ralph Goodale, wasn’t bothered by that.
He defended the wheat board, jail time and all, saying most farmers wanted the wheat board monopoly.
Of course, most gun owners didn’t want the gun registry, but Goodale backed that. Like most Liberals, he’s big on government regulation and jailing the innocent, while going soft on actual criminals.
That the CWB or any of these farm marketing cartels still exist is a marvel in a country that claims to believe in free trade. That people can go to jail for selling product they grew on their own land with their own labour to someone other than the government-designated body should be considered unacceptable to all Canadians.
Justice Campbell said the government’s attempt to right this wrong is in violation of the law because there was no consultation and no vote by the farmers involved.
He pointed to section 47.1 of the Canadian Wheat Board Act which says: “The Minister shall not cause to be introduced in Parliament a bill that would exclude any kind, type, class or grade of wheat or barley, or wheat or barley produced in any area in Canada, from the provisions of Part IV.”
The problem is that this provision is not worth the paper it is printed on.
A fundamental principle of parliamentary democracy is that no parliament can bind the actions of a future parliament.
This is the principle that leaves ideas like balanced-budget laws or laws requiring a referendum before a tax hike unworkable in Canada. A vote in the legislature to change a law does not require the old law to be changed or repealed.
Strangely, some supporters of the wheat board see it that way.
Stewart Wells, a farmer elected director of the CWB, appeared on Byline and claimed that the government could repeal Section 47.1 but could not pass a law to end the monopoly. This is ludicrous.
We elect governments to pass laws, and as elections come and go laws are changed.
Would the people now calling on the Harper government to obey Justice Campbell’s ridiculous ruling feel the same way if this were about the gun registry?
Imagine for a moment the Harper government writing a clause into Bill C-19 that said no future Parliament could bring back a long-gun registry without consultations and a majority vote by gun owners. Would Justice Campbell, the Liberal appointee, uphold that clause? Would the NDP, the Liberals and the consensus media be calling on the government to listen to the court?
They wouldn’t do it for the gun registry and they shouldn’t do it for the wheat board.
— Lilley is the host of Byline on Sun News Network
Farmers bound to ludicrous wheat law
By Brian Lilley,Parliamentary Bureau
You know, I thought that people on the left were against sending people to jail and wanted to make sure we didn’t overcrowd our prisons.
Their reaction to Wednesday’s court ruling on the Canadian Wheat Board makes it look like they support jailing farmers, but not criminals.
Justice Douglas Campbell, a Chretien appointee to the Federal Court, ruled on Wednesday that the government was breaking the law by not having western wheat and barley farmers vote before ending the monopoly of the Canadian Wheat Board.
Right now, any farmer on the Prairies who sells wheat or barley to anyone but the wheat board can be fined and sent to prison for up to two years.
And farmers have gone to jail for selling wheat and barley, or in the case of Jim Chatenay, donating it to a 4-H club in Montana. The Liberal agriculture minister at the time, Ralph Goodale, wasn’t bothered by that.
He defended the wheat board, jail time and all, saying most farmers wanted the wheat board monopoly.
Of course, most gun owners didn’t want the gun registry, but Goodale backed that. Like most Liberals, he’s big on government regulation and jailing the innocent, while going soft on actual criminals.
That the CWB or any of these farm marketing cartels still exist is a marvel in a country that claims to believe in free trade. That people can go to jail for selling product they grew on their own land with their own labour to someone other than the government-designated body should be considered unacceptable to all Canadians.
Justice Campbell said the government’s attempt to right this wrong is in violation of the law because there was no consultation and no vote by the farmers involved.
He pointed to section 47.1 of the Canadian Wheat Board Act which says: “The Minister shall not cause to be introduced in Parliament a bill that would exclude any kind, type, class or grade of wheat or barley, or wheat or barley produced in any area in Canada, from the provisions of Part IV.”
The problem is that this provision is not worth the paper it is printed on.
A fundamental principle of parliamentary democracy is that no parliament can bind the actions of a future parliament.
This is the principle that leaves ideas like balanced-budget laws or laws requiring a referendum before a tax hike unworkable in Canada. A vote in the legislature to change a law does not require the old law to be changed or repealed.
Strangely, some supporters of the wheat board see it that way.
Stewart Wells, a farmer elected director of the CWB, appeared on Byline and claimed that the government could repeal Section 47.1 but could not pass a law to end the monopoly. This is ludicrous.
We elect governments to pass laws, and as elections come and go laws are changed.
Would the people now calling on the Harper government to obey Justice Campbell’s ridiculous ruling feel the same way if this were about the gun registry?
Imagine for a moment the Harper government writing a clause into Bill C-19 that said no future Parliament could bring back a long-gun registry without consultations and a majority vote by gun owners. Would Justice Campbell, the Liberal appointee, uphold that clause? Would the NDP, the Liberals and the consensus media be calling on the government to listen to the court?
They wouldn’t do it for the gun registry and they shouldn’t do it for the wheat board.
— Lilley is the host of Byline on Sun News Network
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