Pubdate: Mon, 04 Oct 2004 Source: Globe and Mail (Canada) Copyright: 2004, The Globe and Mail Company Contact: http://www.globeandmail.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168 Author: Campbell Clark Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) CAUCHON PRESSES LIBERALS ON SAME-SEX MARRIAGE, POT OTTAWA -- Former justice minister Martin Cauchon will call for Paul Martin's government to move quickly to pass legislation on same-sex marriage and decriminalizing marijuana -- telling a Harvard University audience today that real political leaders meet such tricky issues head-on. Mr. Cauchon, now a private lawyer who has indicated that he plans an eventual bid to succeed Mr. Martin as Liberal leader, will deliver his speech on the controversial issues at a critical time, just as a minority Parliament opens and Supreme Court hearings on same-sex marriage are set to begin. It also nudges Mr. Martin at a time when reports suggest his government plans to delay tabling same-sex-marriage legislation for another year. In his speech, a copy of which was provided to The Globe and Mail, Mr. Cauchon defends the Supreme Court's role in reviewing the issue -- he was the justice minister who referred it to the court -- but suggests that once the judges have ruled, politicians must act decisively. "Politicians should not run for the job if they are not prepared to face up to social challenges, and work them through, respectfully, with citizens. And then, at the end of the day, take a clear stand. Defend it. Move it forward. Fighting for justice is what makes the job worthwhile," states the text prepared for his address. "Politicians with an eye on re-election have lots of motivation to sidestep their duty to establish and preserve fundamental freedoms and to just leave it to the courts. Because these issues are never easy, it is often very divisive in the caucus of a political party. Political leadership is important because not fulfilling your duty ultimately undermines democracy, and contributes to cynicism about politics and politicians." On Wednesday, the Supreme Court will review a draft bill proposed by the federal government to amend the legal definition of marriage to include gay and lesbian couples. The court was also asked several questions: Does the federal government have the exclusive jurisdiction to change the legal definition of marriage? Is its draft bill constitutional? Would religious institutions remain free to refuse to marry same-sex couples, in recognition of freedom of religion? Mr. Cauchon's speech does not directly criticize Mr. Martin's government, and his talk to a U.S. audience at Harvard's lecture series on Canada is not an overt salvo in the still-gentle jockeying to succeed Mr. Martin one day. But it is clearly an attempt on Mr. Cauchon's part to position himself early as a champion of the Liberals' social left. It was Mr. Cauchon who put forward legislation to legalize same-sex marriage and decriminalize marijuana in the dying days of Jean Chretien's government. Both of those issues have been left to Mr. Martin's government to conclude. The Liberals' fall to a minority position in the June election has made the timetable for the next leadership race uncertain, since another election could come in as little as 18 months, and Mr. Martin's leadership would be under fire if the Liberals lost. Mr. Martin is expected to win a vote on his leadership at a policy convention next spring, before any efforts to weaken his grasp on the leadership are likely to emerge. In his speech today, Mr. Cauchon will defend the role of the courts in "the advancement of equality" on the same-sex marriage issue, taking to task Conservative critics who argue the courts have been guilty of "judicial activism" by making new law rather than interpreting it. But Mr. Cauchon also stresses the need for politicians to conclude the issue. He feels that once the court issues its opinion, "the process is sufficient and it is time to move ahead," said an informal adviser to Mr. Cauchon. The speech comes just as reports emerge that Mr. Martin's government is seeking to delay until 2006 a potentially divisive vote on the draft law on same-sex marriage that Mr. Cauchon proposed in 2003. Media reports said a leaked cabinet document indicates the government expects a quick response from the Supreme Court on same-sex marriage, but will not even table legislation on the issue until the fall of 2005. That would mean a vote would probably not be held until early 2006. Mr. Martin's government also dragged its feet on legislation to decriminalize marijuana, allowing it to languish on the parliamentary agenda until it eventually died when the June general election was called. Mr. Cauchon says in his speech that the Chretien government's move to decriminalize marijuana was long overdue, and supported by a large majority. "Frankly, such an approach leads to less respect for the law rather than more on the part of young people. It leads them to view our system as harsh, ideological, and out of step with contemporary society," he says in the text for his speech. "But because of the passionate feelings on the part of those who oppose modifying society's approach to the use of a drug like marijuana, political leaders have found it convenient to sidestep and defer treatment of this issue." What Ottawa will ask the Supreme Court Here are the questions put before the Supreme Court of Canada by the federal government. The Act in the first question refers to draft government legislation that would legalize same-sex marriage. 1. Is the annexed "Proposal for an Act respecting certain aspects of legal capacity for marriage for civil purposes" within the exclusive legislative authority of the Parliament of Canada? If not, in what particular or particulars, and to what extent? 2. If the answer to Question 1 is yes, is S. 1 of the proposal, which extends capacity to marry to persons of the same sex, consistent with the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms? If not, in what particular or particulars, and to what extent? 3. Does the freedom of religion guarantee by paragraph 2(e) of the Canadian Charter or Rights and Freedoms protect religious officials from being compelled to perform a marriage between two persons of the same sex that is contrary to their religious beliefs? 4. Is the opposite-sex requirement for marriage for civil purposes, as established by the common law and set out for Quebec in S. 5 of the Federal Law -- Civil Law Harmonization Act, No. 1, consistent with the Canadian Charter or Rights and Freedoms? If not, in what particular or particulars, and to what extent? - --- MAP posted-by: Derek