Docket: A-487-15
Citation: 2017 FCA 1
CORAM:
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NADON J.A.
PELLETIER J.A.
SCOTT J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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EMILIE TAMAN
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Appellant
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and
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ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA
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Respondent
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REASONS
FOR JUDGMENT
PELLETIER J.A.
I.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The appellant Emilie Taman was formerly a
federal prosecutor in the Regulatory and Economic Prosecutions and Management
Branch of the Public Prosecution Service of Canada (PPSC). Her team was
responsible for the prosecution of regulatory offences. She worked on
prosecutions under the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C.
2001, c. 27; the Fisheries Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. F-14; the Income Tax
Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.) and the Lobbying Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. 44 (4th Supp.).
[2]
On November 21, 2014, Ms Taman submitted a
request to the Public Service Commission (the Commission) pursuant to section
114 of the Public Service Employment Act, S.C. 2003, c. 22, ss. 12, 13 [PSEA]
for permission to seek the nomination of a political party and, if successful,
to run as that political party’s candidate in the October 19, 2015 federal
election. She sought a leave of absence without pay beginning on the day she
won the nomination and continuing through the election period. In the event
that she was not successful, she volunteered to take a “cooling
off” leave without pay and to take a non-prosecutorial position within
the PPSC.
[3]
Ms Taman’s immediate supervisor was of the view
that her ability to perform her duties in a politically impartial manner would
be impaired or perceived to be impaired upon nomination and during the
election. However, he was satisfied that no actual or perceived impairment
would exist upon her return to work if she did not receive the nomination or
was not elected. Therefore, he supported her application.
[4]
The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP)
disagreed that the perception of partiality would not arise if Ms Taman was
unsuccessful in seeking nomination or in being elected. In his opinion, seeking
a political party’s nomination indicates a significant allegiance to the party
and its platform. This allegiance could be perceived as interfering with Ms
Taman’s ability to independently perform her prosecutorial functions,
particularly on files of a political nature, such as offences under the Lobbying
Act, the Canada Elections Act, S.C. 2000, c. 9 and the Parliament
of Canada Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. P-1. The DPP was also of the view that Ms
Taman could not be transferred to a non-prosecutorial position upon her return
as few such positions exist in the PPSC.
[5]
On December 16, 2014, the Commission rejected Ms
Taman’s request as it was not satisfied as required by subsections 114(4) and
(5) of the PSEA that Ms Taman could return to her position without being
impaired or being perceived to be impaired in her ability to perform her duties
impartially.Ms Taman sought judicial review of the Commission’s decision in the
Federal Court. Justice Kane acknowledged that the Commission’s decision limited
Ms Taman’s rights under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms (the Charter),
but concluded that the decision was a proportionate balancing of the Charter
rights in dispute and Ms Taman’s ability to perform her duties in a politically
impartial manner upon her return to work. Ms Taman appeals to this Court from
that judgment.
[6]
For the reasons which follow, I would allow the
appeal. Given that the 2015 federal election has come and gone, I would not
remit the matter to the Commission for redetermination as its decision would
have no practical effect on Ms Taman’s right to seek elected office.
II.
DECISION UNDER REVIEW
[7]
I begin by reviewing the Commission’s decision
refusing Ms Taman’s request for permission to seek elected office.
[8]
In order to avoid repetition of the cumbersome
formulas “seek[ing] nomination as a candidate in a
federal, provincial or territorial election” and “be[ing] a candidate in a federal, provincial or territorial
election,” I propose to refer to the process of seeking permission to
pursue a political nomination and, if successful, seeking permission to be a
candidate in an election as “seeking elected office.”
[9]
Furthermore, while the grammatical opposite of
political impartiality is political partiality, this phrase is rather uncommunicative.
I believe that the mischief which the PSEA means to address is political
partisanship in the public service, or the risk of the appearance of
partisanship. As a result, I propose to use the expressions “partisanship” or “political
partisanship” to mean the opposite of political impartiality. As was
pointed out in R. v. Cawthorne, 2016 SCC 32, 402 D.L.R. (4th) 50 at
paragraph 27 [Cawthorne], in the context of prosecutorial independence, “‘[p]artisan’ is not broadly synonymous with ‘political.’”
However, in the context of this discussion, I propose to use the two words as
synonyms for the sake of convenience and brevity.
[10]
The Commission began by summarizing the
statutory framework for Ms Taman’s request for permission to seek elected
office in the 2015 federal election. After setting out the sources of
information before it, the Commission expressed its concern that Ms Taman’s
ability to perform her duties in a politically impartial manner would be
impaired or perceived to be impaired “in light of the
nature of her duties and the increased publicity, visibility and recognition
that would be associated with seeking nomination and being a candidate in a
federal election”: Appeal Book [AB] at 73.
[11]
The Commission then summarized Ms Taman’s duties,
noting that Ms Taman was highly visible when she appeared in court in her
capacity as a federal prosecutor, often before members of the public, including
friends and relatives of the defendant. In addition she could be asked to deal
with the media to provide information about the proceedings in which she was
engaged.
[12]
The Commission then referred to the concerns
expressed by the DPP, namely that being a candidate of a political party would
indicate a significant allegiance to a political party which, in his view, would
undermine the independence of the prosecutorial function of his office. This
led the Commission to conclude that this, in turn, could lead to a perception
that Ms Taman was not able to perform her duties in a politically impartial
manner.
[13]
Next, the Commission considered whether the risk
of impairment due to partisanship could be mitigated, in the event that Ms
Taman was not elected, by a leave without pay or by reassignment to
non-prosecutorial duties following the election. This possibility appeared to
be foreclosed by the DPP’s assertion that he could not accommodate such an arrangement
in light of its small size.
[14]
The Commission’s ultimate conclusion was that
being a candidate for a political party “may impair or
be perceived as impairing” Ms Taman’s ability to perform her duties in a
politically impartial manner. As a result, the Commission was not satisfied
that the conditions set out in subsections 114(4) and (5) of the PSEA
had been met and therefore permission could not be granted.
[15]
The matter then came before the Federal Court on
an application for judicial review. For the purposes of this appeal, it is
sufficient to say that the Federal Court dismissed Ms Taman’s application for
judicial review on the basis that the Commission’s decision was reasonable as
it reflected a proportionate balancing of Ms Taman’s right to participate in
the political process pursuant to paragraph 2(b) and section 3 of the Charter
and the public’s interest in having a public service whose members are able to
perform their duties, and to be seen to perform their duties, in a politically
impartial manner. The Federal Court followed the Supreme Court’s framework for
analyzing administrative decisions that engage an applicant’s rights under the Charter
as set out in Doré v. Barreau du Québec, 2012 SCC 12, [2012] 1 S.C.R.
395 [Doré] and, more recently, Loyola High School v. Quebec (Attorney
General), 2015 SCC 12, [2015] 1 S.C.R. 613.
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
[16]
On appeal from the Federal Court sitting in
judicial review, this Court must determine whether the Federal Court adopted
the correct standard of review and, if it did, whether it applied it properly: Dr.
Q. v. College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia, 2003 SCC 19,
[2003] 1 S.C.R. 226 at paras. 43-44. In practical terms, this means that this
Court steps into the shoes of the Federal Court: Merck Frosst Canada Ltd. v.
Canada (Health), 2012 SCC 3, [2012] 1 S.C.R. 23 at para. 247; Agraira v.
Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36, [2013] 2
S.C.R. 559 at paras. 45-46.
[17]
In this case, the standard of review of the
Commission’s decision is reasonableness. The request for permission to seek
elected office required the Commission to interpret and apply its “home”
statute. As a result, the presumption of a reasonableness standard of review
applies to a review of the Commission’s decision on administrative law grounds:
Alberta (Information and Privacy Commissioner) v. Alberta Teachers’
Association, 2011 SCC 61, [2011] 3 S.C.R. 654 at para. 34; Edmonton
(City) v. Edmonton East (Capilano) Shopping Centres Ltd., 2016 SCC 47, 402
D.L.R. (4th) 236 at paras. 22-23.
[18]
As I do not propose to address the Charter
issues that were raised in argument before us, I will not review the
Commission’s decision to see if it is reasonable in the sense of representing, “a proportionate balancing of Charter protections at play”:
Doré at para. 57. I choose not to address the Charter issues because,
apart from a single reference to the Charter in her response to the
DPP’s position (AB at 788), Ms Taman does not appear to have pursued them
before the PSC. This Court is reluctant to embark upon Charter reviews
where the parties have not pursued their Charter remedies before the
initial decision maker: see Forest Ethics Advocacy Association v. Canada
(National Energy Board), 2014 FCA 245, [2015] 4 F.C.R. 75 at para. 37. This
reluctance is grounded in the need to allow the federal board, commission or
tribunal an opportunity to lead evidence to support a “reasonable limitation” argument,
which is best done before the trier of fact. It is grounded as well in our
recognition that the initial decision maker’s analysis will provide valuable
insights into the proper balancing of the various factors at play.
IV.
ANALYSIS
[19]
For ease of reference, the relevant provisions
of the PSEA are reproduced below:
112 The purpose of this Part is
to recognize the right of employees to engage in political activities while
maintaining the principle of political impartiality in the public service.
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112 La présente
partie a pour objet de reconnaître aux fonctionnaires le droit de se livrer à
des activités politiques tout en respectant le principe d’impartialité
politique au sein de la fonction publique.
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114(1) An employee may seek nomination as a
candidate in a federal, provincial or territorial election before or during
the election period only if the employee has requested and obtained
permission from the Commission to do so.
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114 (1) Le
fonctionnaire désireux d’être choisi, avant ou pendant la période électorale,
comme candidat à une élection fédérale, provinciale ou territoriale doit
demander et obtenir la permission de la Commission.
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(2) An
employee may, before the election period, be a candidate in a federal,
provincial or territorial election only if the employee has requested and
obtained permission from the Commission to do so.
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(2) Le
fonctionnaire qui a été choisi comme candidat à une élection fédérale,
provinciale ou territoriale doit, pour la période précédant la période
électorale, demander et obtenir la permission de la Commission.
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(3) An
employee may, during the election period, be a candidate in a federal,
provincial or territorial election only if the employee has requested and
obtained a leave of absence without pay from the Commission.
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(3) Le
fonctionnaire désireux de se porter candidat à une élection fédérale,
provinciale ou territoriale doit, pour la période électorale, demander à la
Commission et obtenir d’elle un congé sans solde.
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(4) The
Commission may grant permission for the purpose of subsection (1) or (2) only
if it is satisfied that the employee’s ability to perform his or her duties
in a politically impartial manner will not be impaired or perceived to be
impaired.
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(4) La
Commission n’accorde la permission aux termes des paragraphes (1) ou (2) que
si elle est convaincue que la capacité du fonctionnaire d’exercer ses
fonctions de façon politiquement impartiale ne sera pas atteinte ou ne
semblera pas être atteinte.
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(5) The
Commission may grant leave for the purpose of subsection (3) only if it is
satisfied that being a candidate during the election period will not impair
or be perceived as impairing the employee’s ability to perform his or her
duties in a politically impartial manner.
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(5) La
Commission n’accorde le congé aux termes du paragraphe (3) que si elle est
convaincue que le fait pour le fonctionnaire d’être candidat pendant la
période électorale ne portera pas atteinte ou ne semblera pas porter atteinte
à sa capacité d’exercer ses fonctions de façon politiquement impartiale.
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(6) In deciding whether
seeking nomination as, or being, a candidate will impair or be perceived as
impairing the employee’s ability to perform his or her duties in a
politically impartial manner, the Commission may take into consideration
factors such as the nature of the election, the nature of the employee’s
duties and the level and visibility of the employee’s position.
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(6) Pour prendre sa
décision, la Commission peut tenir compte notamment de la nature des
fonctions du fonctionnaire, du niveau et de la visibilité de son poste et de
la nature de l’élection.
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[20]
It appears from these provisions that Parliament
was concerned not so much with political impartiality, in and of itself, but
rather with the impairment, or the perception of impairment, of a public official’s
ability to perform their duties in a politically impartial manner. It would
appear to me to follow that in order to give or refuse a public official
permission to seek elected office, the Commission could reasonably be expected
to have a clear idea of what would impair, or give the appearance of impairing,
a public official’s ability to perform the duties of their employment in a
politically impartial way.
[21]
The Commission’s task is made all the more
difficult by the fact that it must decide on a future state of affairs. The
Commission is not asked to decide if seeking elected office has impaired
a public official’s ability to perform their duties in a politically impartial
manner in a given case, but rather if seeking elected office will impair
a public official’s ability to do so in the future. A similar inquiry is
required in relation to the public’s perception of the official’s ability be
politically impartial. To that extent, the Commission must have some idea as to
what facts or characteristics that are ascertainable prior to an election
campaign are or may be predictors of the public official’s conduct, or the
perception of their conduct, after the campaign.
[22]
Impairment due to partisanship and the
perception of such impairment are two distinct inquiries. A public official
could persuade the Commission that they will, in fact, act in a politically
impartial manner after the election but fail to persuade the Commission that
they will not be perceived to act in a politically partisan manner. One would
expect that while there may be overlapping considerations, there will be
factors that are specific to one branch or the other of the Commission’s
inquiry.
[23]
The PSEA does provide a list of factors that
the Commission may take into consideration in deciding whether to grant a
public official permission to run for elected office. Those factors are the
nature of the election, the nature of the employee’s duties and the level and
visibility of the employee’s position: PSEA, s. 114(6). The question that
arises is the predictive value of these factors for either of the two inquiries
that the Commission must undertake.
[24]
For example, how does knowledge of the
employee’s duties assist the Commission in deciding if the employee will be
impaired in their ability to perform those duties in a politically impartial
manner after a failed attempt at election to public office?
[25]
Public officials have, both before and after an
attempt to be elected to public office, a duty of loyalty to their employer, a
duty that requires public officials, with some exceptions, to abstain from
publicly criticizing government policy. In Fraser v. Canada (Public Service
Staff Relations Board), [1985] 2 S.C.R. 455, 1985 CanLII 14 [Fraser],
Chief Justice Dickson listed the characteristics that are necessary to enable
public officials to do their jobs: knowledge, fairness and integrity. The Chief
Justice then went on to describe a fourth necessary characteristic:
As the Adjudicator indicated, a further
characteristic is loyalty. As a general rule, federal public servants should be
loyal to their employer, the Government of Canada. The loyalty owed is to the
Government of Canada, not the political party in power at any one time. A
public servant need not vote for the governing party. Nor need he or she
publicly espouse its policies…it is my view that a public servant must not
engage, as the appellant did in the present case, in sustained and highly
visible attacks on major Government policies. In conducting himself in this way
the appellant, in my view, displayed a lack of loyalty to the Government that
was inconsistent with his duties as an employee of the Government.
Fraser at
470.
[26]
Unless one is prepared to assume (without
evidence) that the more autonomy and discretion a public official has, the more
likely they are to breach their duty of loyalty and behave (or be perceived to
behave) in a partisan manner after having sought public office, one must ask
how autonomy and discretion in a given official’s duties are indicative of how
that official will behave (or be perceived to behave) following an unsuccessful
attempt to be elected to office. The fact that the PSEA permits consideration
of the nature of a public official’s duties does not necessarily mean that some
duties, as opposed to others, increase the likelihood of partisan activity, or
the perception of partisan activity, upon that official’s return to work.
[27]
The nature of an election campaign is such that
it will bring a public official/candidate to the attention of the general
public. This increases the risk that someone may claim that they are acting in
a partisan manner once they return to their employment. Presumably, the mere
possibility that a complaint may be made, independently of its merits, is not
sufficient to justify refusing a public official permission to seek elected
office. If too much weight is given to that possibility, no public official who
deals with the public in any way would ever be given permission. The Commission
must be able to weigh the likelihood of complaints and the risk of adverse
perception of the public official in the discharge of their post-election
duties against the right to participate in the electoral process offered them
by section 112 of the PSEA. In addition, the PSC may also weigh whether
any risk of adverse public perception can be minimized by public education
measures, which might be undertaken by the PSC itself or by ministry managers.
[28]
These questions and others arise in attempting
to understand how Parliament intended the political activities provisions of
the PSEA to be interpreted and applied, bearing in mind that the
restrictions on public officials in the predecessor legislation were struck
down for being overbroad: Osborne v. Canada (Treasury Board), [1991] 2
S.C.R. 69, 82 D.L.R. (4th) 321 at 101. It strikes me as unlikely that
Parliament intended to effectively deprive all but the most junior public
officials of the right to run for elected office.
[29]
Turning now to the Commission’s decision, how
did it deal with the relationship between seeking elected office and political
impartiality?
[30]
The Commission noted its concerns that Ms
Taman’s ability to perform her duties in a politically impartial manner, while
working as a federal prosecutor, may be impaired or be perceived to be impaired
“in light of the nature of her duties and the increased
publicity, visibility and recognition that would be associated with seeking
nomination and being a candidate in a federal election”: AB at 73. The
Commission goes on to comment that Ms Taman would have increased visibility as
a result of campaign activities designed to raise her profile in the riding in
which she sought to be a candidate.
[31]
At this point, the Commission appears to be
setting Ms Taman’s ability to impartially perform her duties as a federal
prosecutor against the publicity, visibility, and recognition that would be
associated with running for elected office. This suggests that as publicity,
visibility and recognition increase, the ability (or the perception of one’s
ability) to perform one’s duties without impairment due to partisanship
decreases. While this may ultimately be shown to be true, it is not
self-evident.
[32]
The Commission then summarized Ms Taman’s duties
as a federal prosecutor in the Regulatory and Economic Prosecutions and
Management Branch. It noted that Ms Taman has a high level of autonomy and
decision-making. It also noted that Ms Taman is involved in various activities
related to prosecution of offences under federal legislation such as advising
investigative agencies such as the RCMP, discussing plea and sentencing with
defence counsel and determining issue resolution for some files. The Commission
commented on the fact that Ms Taman is highly visible when appearing in Court.
[33]
The Commission then noted the concerns of the
DPP that seeking elected office indicates a significant allegiance to a
political party and its platform. In the DPP’s view, this would undermine the
independence of the prosecutorial function of the ODPP. The Commission
concluded that this undermining could lead to the perception that Ms Taman was
not able to perform her duties in a politically impartial manner.
[34]
This is the substance of the Commission’s analysis
as to whether Ms Taman, following her return to work after an unsuccessful attempt
at election to public office, would be impaired, or be perceived to be
impaired, in her ability to perform her duties in a politically impartial
manner.
[35]
It appears to me that the Commission’s analysis
consisted of equating autonomy, discretion and visibility with the impairment
of Ms Taman’s ability to perform her duties with political impartiality. The
Commission also appears to have been uncritical of the DPP’s claim that a
prosecutor’s candidacy and the significant allegiance to a political party and
its platform implicit in that candidacy undermines the independence of the
ODPP.
[36]
It is not my position that these conclusions
could not ultimately be shown to be reasonable. My position is that the
Commission has not justified its conclusions. It seems to have proceeded on the
basis of causal relationships that appeared to it to be self-evident.
[37]
At the risk of repeating myself, the
Commission’s task was to make two determinations. It had to decide if granting
Ms Taman permission to seek elected office would result in, 1) an impairment,
or 2) a perception of impairment, of her ability to perform her duties in a politically
impartial manner upon her return to her position after the election.
[38]
While the Commission has identified autonomy,
discretion and visibility as factors in its consideration of impairment, it has
not indicated how these factors led it to its ultimate conclusion. Ms Taman’s
autonomy, discretion and visibility would have been the same before and after
the election. If they did not contribute to the impairment of her ability (as
opposed to a perception of her ability) to discharge her duties before the
election, why would they have done so after the election? The opportunity to
act in a partisan manner would have been the same before and after the
election. If Ms Taman’s political opinions did not colour the exercise of her
discretion before the election, why would they do so after the election?
[39]
The Commission may have answers to these
questions but it has not articulated them so as to allow this Court to assess
the reasonableness of its conclusions.
[40]
The issue of the perception of impairment
presents itself in a slightly different fashion but the issues are the same. As
pointed out by the Commission, the fact of seeking elected office would result
in Ms Taman engaging in campaign activities in order to become known and
recognizable in her riding and perhaps further afield. The result would be that
when she resumed her duties, certain members of the public would, for a time,
recognize her as having been a candidate for a particular political party. The
more visible her position, the wider the recognition of her political
affiliation.
[41]
That said, how would her political affiliation,
now publicly known, affect the perception of her ability to perform her duties
in a politically impartial manner. It is important to distinguish between known
political affiliation and political activity in the workplace. One must assume
that Ms Taman would refrain from political activity in the workplace so that
the sole basis for a perception of partiality in the discharge of her duties
would be her known political affiliation. The question for the PSC is whether
the fact that a public official’s political affiliation will become public
knowledge is, in and of itself, a sufficient ground to refuse permission to
seek elected office.
[42]
Politics is a partisan activity; activists of
other political parties might well attack Ms Taman’s performance of her duties
for purely partisan reasons, unrelated to any actual or perceived partiality.
This may or may not come within the notion of perception of impairment of her
ability to perform her duties in a politically impartial manner. That is a
matter for the Commission to decide but there is an argument to be made that Ms
Taman’s right to participate fully in the electoral process should not be
curtailed by the possibility of bad faith attacks on her impartiality.
[43]
Of course, not all allegations of political
partisanship would be made in bad faith. How would such allegations be assessed
if Ms Taman had been given permission to seek public office but had been
unsuccessful? If an allegation of partisanship were made in connection with Ms
Taman’s involvement in a particular file, say a prosecution under the Lobbying
Act, R.S.C., 1985, c. 44 (4th Supp.), that allegation might be assessed using
the test for bias set out in Committee for Justice and Liberty v. National
Energy Board, [1978] 1 S.C.R. 369 at 394, 1976 CanLII 2 or the test for
conflict of interest described in Threader v. Canada (Treasury Board),
[1987] 1 F.C. 41 at 56-57, 68 N.R. 143 (C.A.). But the Commission is not tasked
with deciding specific cases of reasonable apprehension of bias or conflict of
interest. It must decide whether the fact of having been a candidate for a
political party will, in and of itself, impair the perception of a public
official’s ability to perform their duties without partisanship.
[44]
The Commission appears to have taken to heart
the DPP’s concerns about prosecutorial independence. While the latter has a
legitimate interest in the perceived independence of his office, the Commission
was bound to examine his comments with care. Concerns about prosecutorial
independence arise from the possibility that a sitting government could use its
control over criminal prosecutions to punish its enemies or to advance its
partisan agenda. These preoccupations were reflected in Cawthorne at
paragraph 23:
Charron J. reiterated this point in Miazga
v. Kvello Estate, 2009 SCC 51, [2009] 3 S.C.R. 339, describing the
independence of the Attorney General as a “constitutionally entrenched”
principle that “requires that the Attorney General act independently of
political pressures from government”: para. 46. But the logic of these
statements clearly extends to Crown prosecutors and other public officials exercising
a prosecutorial function.
[45]
With all due respect to the opinion of the DPP,
a respected public servant, it is not obvious that Ms Taman’s candidacy would
have raised an issue of prosecutorial independence in this sense. The issue for
the Commission was not prosecutorial independence but prosecutorial
partisanship. How probable was it that Ms Taman, following an unsuccessful
attempt to obtain elected office, would conduct herself in a politically
partisan way or in a manner which would leave her open to allegations of political
partisanship?
[46]
The DPP’s opinion appears to have been shaped by
the fact that his office was called upon to defend (successfully) a motion
seeking the removal from a particular file of a prosecutor who had 20 years
previously been an electoral candidate. No doubt the DPP was embarrassed by the
allegations of partiality and anxious to avoid a repeat of the experience, but
the question for the Commission was whether the DPP’s sensitivity to the issue
was a sufficient ground to deprive Ms Taman of her right to participate in the
political process which the PSEA recognizes.
V.
CONCLUSION
[47]
To summarize, the Commission has not justified
its refusal to grant Ms Taman permission to seek elected office. It relied on
the factors listed in the PSEA without showing how the presence of those
factors led to its conclusion. The Commission did not distinguish between
actual impairment of Ms Taman’s ability to perform her duties in a politically
impartial manner and a perception of impairment of her ability to do so. While
this suggests a deficiency in the preparation of the Commission’s reasons, it
also suggests errors in reasoning which make the decision unreasonable. That is
to say, the decision lacks justification, transparency and intelligibility: Dunsmuir
v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1 S.C.R. 190 at para. 47.
[48]
I would therefore allow the appeal and set aside
the decision of the Commission with costs to Ms Taman in this Court and in the
Federal Court. We were advised at the hearing of the appeal that this matter is
not moot as Ms Taman has a grievance pending relating to her employment status.
Be that as it may, I do not see the utility of asking the Commission to engage
in a fresh determination of Ms Taman’s request for permission to seek elected
office for purely collateral purposes. As a result, I would not return the
matter to the Commission for a fresh determination.
"J.D. Denis Pelletier"
“I agree
M. Nadon J.A.”
“I agree
A.F. Scott J.A.”