Redirected from Canadian Constitution
The constitution is made up of several parts:
The Charter is by far the most of-cited portion of the constitution. The Constitution Acts of 1867 and 1871, while certainly relevant, are generally not as well known. They have often been denounced as "messy," "almost incoherent" or worse for their somewhat convoluted and dated language.
Much of how Canada's government works cannot be accurately learned from a simple reading of the constitution, as like Britain, the Canadian government is heavily dependent on unwritten constitutional conventions. For example, a literal reading of the constitution would seem to indicate that Canada is an authoritarian nation run almost single-handedly by a dictatorial governor general. Of course this s not the case, the Governor General is merely a figurehead, and the true power rests in the prime minister, despite the fact that until 1983 the latter office was not even mentioned in the constitution.
Amending the Canadian Constitution is a topic of great debate in Canada. While there seems to be little doubt that the constitution needs some amending, the procedure for doing so is quite complex, requiring approval from both the federal parliament and two-thirds of the Provincial governments.
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