All judges, whether appointed to provincial or federal positions
are entitled to judicial independence in Canada. The
source of such independence for federal appointments is in part from the text
of the Constitution Act, 1867 (s. 96) but more generally, arises from
unwritten, but binding norms adopted by the Constitution (Provincial Judges
Reference [1997] 3 SCR 3).
Judicial independence requires security of tenure, financial
security and administrative independence.
Security of tenure means, at base, that a judge serves until
a fixed retirement date so long as the judge is able and does not misconduct
themselves in office. A judge must never
fear to rule one way or another because of the chance of being removed.
Financial security means judges must be compensated so as to
be removed from business or financial entanglements that might otherwise affect
the office. Basically, judges must be
paid a decent and sufficient professional income.
Administrative independence requires that judges have power
over the administrative decisions bearing directly on the exercise of their
office.
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