The Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed the legality of a law that restricts members of a spy oversight committee from using their parliamentary privilege to disclose sensitive information. This ruling, with an 8-1 majority, clarifies the status of the National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians (NSICOP).
Comprising MPs and senators from diverse political parties, NSICOP has access to highly confidential data. While parliamentarians typically enjoy immunity for statements made in Parliament, NSICOP members could potentially face a 14-year prison sentence for unlawfully divulging protected information under the committee’s legislation.
Ryan Alford, a law professor at Lakehead University, led a legal challenge against the law, contending that restricting parliamentary privilege required a constitutional amendment. Although Alford succeeded in the Ontario Superior Court, the Ontario Court of Appeal overturned the decision in April 2024.
The Court of Appeal’s three-judge panel determined that Parliament has the authority to limit freedom of speech and debate as outlined in the NSICOP legislation without necessitating a constitutional amendment. Subsequently, Alford appealed to the Supreme Court, which upheld the legislation as a lawful and modest restriction on parliamentary privilege, aligning with the Constitution’s relevant section.
