U of S professor explains impact of Emergencies Act
The reactions began even before the official announcement was made on Monday – the prime minister was, for the first time, invoking the Emergencies Act.
With reactions came misinformation and assumptions, but Dwight Newman — a law professor at the University of Saskatchewan, as well as Canada Research Chair in Indigenous Rights in Constitutional and International Law — dispelled some of those.
The Emergencies Act was made law in 1988, replacing the War Measures Act which the elder Prime Minister Trudeau used during the October Crisis in 1970.
Newman explained the new act allows the federal executive to take up certain powers on a temporary basis and use those powers that it might normally need Parliament or the provinces for.