| ▲ | bluegatty 6 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
I totally agree, but that's a question aside from the institutional authoritarianism of statist countries. Canada and European nations are not very 'liberal' in the sense a lot of people would like - they are communitarian. We lament Trump breaking norms ... the office of the Canadian PM is almost only bounded by norms, he has crazy amounts of power - on paper. A Trump-like actor in Canada (maybe UK as well) could do way more damage. I think that the quality of the judiciary is subjective but real, it can be characterized. I don't have a problem with this law as it is written, to the extent it's used judiciously, which I generally expect in Canada - but that's only because of an understanding of the system as a whole, not as it is written. | |||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | ghssds 5 hours ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
On paper, there is no Canadian PM. The Constitution reads: "The Executive Government and Authority of and over Canada is hereby declared to continue and be vested in the Queen." The existence of a Prime Minister and the fact executive powers are delegated to them are customary. A Trump-like actor in Canada would do far less damage than in USA. There is no position they could held that would give them the power to do lot of damage. The Queen (nowaday King) has no power. If they tried to use it's constitutional powers as written they would be laughed out. The Governor General, who may act on behalf of the Queen would be laughed out too if they tried to take any decision. The Prime Minister seems all powerful but they are one motion from the House of Common from being overthrown. When one's become POTUS, they are basically POTUS until the end of their term. The exception is impeachment which is a very complicated process that never worked. In Canada, the House of Common can simply vote the Prime Minister out. The Prime Minister is very powerful, I agree, but only as long as they behave. | |||||||||||||||||
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