Use of Section 33 notwithstanding clause to bypass Charter rights
US May 8, 2026Trend Signal
4
mentions (7d)
4
mentions (30d)
May 8, 2026
first seen
1
countries
Context & Analysis
This trend "Use of Section 33 notwithstanding clause to bypass Charter rights" was detected in the Law & Legal category with a score of 92/100. This trend is experiencing explosive growth and attracting significant attention right now.
Related entities
Source excerpts
/ / May 8, 2026 Written by: ! > “The clause was designed to be invoked by legislatures in exceptional situations, and only as a last resort after careful consideration. It was not designed to be used by governments as a convenience or as a means to circumvent proper process.”—Roy Romanow and Roy McMurtry Attorneys General Saskatchewan and Ontario, 1981 The “clause” in question is the “notwithstanding clause,” also known as Section 33 of . Over the past few years, premiers have come to see it...
— policyalternatives.ca
What sources say
"The piece argues that invoking the notwithstanding clause as a routine tool undermines democracy and circumvents Charter scrutiny."
"On April 17, the Charter of Rights and Freedoms turned forty-four. The same morning, Minister of Justice Sean Fraser toured the Library and Archives..."
"QUÉBEC - Quebec Premier Christine Fréchette intends to renew the Charter's override clause to protect one of the province's French-language laws from court..."
"QUÉBEC -. Quebec Premier Christine Fréchette committed on Tuesday to renew the use of the Charter's override clause to protect a French-language law from..."