000 01699pab a2200169 454500
008 180718b2004 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aOmbrain, Nicholas D.
245 _aCabinet secrecy
260 _c2004
300 _ap.332-59.
362 _aFall
520 _aCabinet secrecy is a cornerstone of the constitution of the Westminster system of government and is safeguarded by convention, common law and statute law in leading Westminster regimes. Secrecy of cabinet proceedings is very much part of the efficient constitution, but the protections afforded by convention and law are neither well understood nor particularly popular. This article examines the convention and how it differs from the common law and statute law treatments of cabinet secrecy. It considers the essential requirements for cabinet secrecy: collective decision-making; the protection of the views and opinions of ministers; and several related problems of the constitution, including the role of the cabinet as the informal executive, the use of the cabinet as an administrative coordinating mechanism, and-unique to Canada - the use of statute law to remove the courts from their traditional role of determining the balance between individual rights and those of the state. Cabinet secrecy is essential to a system of government where responsible ministers collectively decide the government's policy, but in order to play a proper role in our affairs the convention on secrecy needs to be constitutionally validated by the articulation of its purpose and scope. - Reproduced.
650 _aPolitics and government
650 _aPublic administration
773 _aCanadian Public Administration
909 _a62833
999 _c62833
_d62833