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For the last 30 years, politicians and the media have frequently recounted the same story
about the patriation of Canada’s constitution and the adoption of the Charter of Rights. Most of
the credit in this version goes to Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, but three others are recognized
for breaking an impasse in the negotiations in 1981: federal justice minister Jean Chrétien,
Saskatchewan attorney general Roy Romanow, and Ontario attorney general Roy McMurtry. In
his memoirs, Newfoundland Premier Brian Peckford argues that the key intervention came not
from Romanow, Chrétien, and McMcMurtry, but from Peckford himself and the members of the
Newfoundland delegation.
The long-accepted narrative goes like this. In the 1980s, Trudeau was determined to create a
charter of rights and a procedure that would allow Canada to amend its constitution without
seeking Britain’s permission, a legacy from the country’s colonial past. Trudeau faced opposition
from eight provincial premiers (all but those from Ontario and New Brunswick), who formed the
Gang of Eight to advance their own decentralized vision of Canada. After failing to come to an
agreement with the provinces, Trudeau decided to proceed without them, but a Supreme Court
ruling forced him back to the negotiating table.
According to this version of history, the decisive moment came during a federal-provincial
conference in November 1981. The deadlock between Ottawa and the provinces was broken
when Chrétien, Romanow, and McMurtry left the main meeting room in the Ottawa Conference
Centre and ducked into an unused kitchen pantry. There they reached a compromise, which
journalists later mythologized as the “Kitchen Accord.” Seen as the backbone of Canada’s new
constitution, the agreement provided for a charter of rights and a notwithstanding clause that
would allow legislatures to exempt legislation from the charter’s terms. The accord also included
a provision that the constitution could be amended with the approval of the federal parliament
and two-thirds of the provinces representing at least 50 per cent of the Canadian population.
In Some Day the Sun Will Shine and Have Not Will Be No More, Brian Peckford
provides documentation to support his claim that the patriation package of 1981 evolved from a
Newfoundland proposal and not from the Kitchen Accord. In Peckford’s account, he prepared a
formal document, which was revised during the night of 4 November 1981, hours after the
creation of the Kitchen Accord, in a meeting with representatives from several provinces. The
next morning, Peckford presented the agreement to the federal-provincial conference. The
federal government and all the provinces except Quebec agreed to the package, which, with a
few amendments, became Canada’s constitution.
Peckford’s account brings long-needed balance to the story. The patriation process was a
complex series of manoeuvres, in which several individuals played pivotal roles. To credit only
Trudeau, Chrétien, Romanow, and McMurtry is to miss a large part of what actually happened.
Many politicians and officials were present on the night of 4 November 1981 in the Chateau
Laurier suite of Saskatchewan Premier Allan Blakeney, where six provinces accepted a revised
version of Peckford’s plan. Few of the participants in that historic meeting even knew about the
existence of Kitchen Accord.
This is not to say that the Kitchen Accord was unimportant. It might not have had any direct
effect on Newfoundland or many of the other provincial delegations, but it was essential in
altering the positions of Ontario and the federal government. When Chrétien and McMurtry left
the kitchen pantry, they were committed to an agreement that would include a notwithstanding
clause to limit the force of a new Charter of Rights. Chrétien began to push Prime Minister
Trudeau to accept such a deal, unknowingly preparing him for the Peckford proposal. Ontario
similarly had moved to a place where it would accept what the Newfoundland premier was about
to put forward. It was Romanow, through the Kitchen Accord, and not Peckford, who had
forged an agreement with the governments of Canada and Ontario.
Brian Peckford deserves considerable credit for our constitution, alongside Pierre Trudeau,
Jean Chrétien, Roy Romanow, and Roy McMurtry. Important too were Saskatchewan’s Howard
Leeson, Alberta’s Peter Meekison, and countless other unelected officials who shunned the
spotlight and have been largely ignored in the history books.
People like simple stories, and the media and politicians oblige. Yet there was nothing
simple about our constitutional drama of 1981.
Stephen Azzi is associate professor in the Clayton H. Riddell Graduate Program in
Political Management and the Department of History, Carleton University. He recently revised
the/ Canadian Encyclopedia entry on “Patriation of the Constitution.”
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