Ottawa says laws that override Charter rights aren’t shielded from legal scrutiny
OTTAWA — Judges must have the legal right to issue non-binding judgments in cases where governments override sections of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, a lawyer for the attorney general of Canada argued in Supreme Court on Wednesday.
Guy J. Pratte pleaded his case on the third day of hearings at the country’s highest court on the constitutionality of Quebec’s 2019 secularism law known as Bill 21, which bans some public sector workers from wearing religious symbols on the job.
The controversial law is protected from court challenges that it violates fundamental rights, like freedom of religion and expression, because it invokes a section of the Charter that allows governments to override those rights. Quebec invoked the override clause in Bill 21 pre-emptively — it included the section in the initial draft of the legislation, before it faced legal scrutiny.
Lawyers for the government said they are confident the top court will uphold its law. And while the court must decide whether Bill 21 is constitutional, the justices are also considering whether judges can issue non-binding opinions on laws that pre-emptively invoke the override clause — even if they can’t strike down those laws.


