Brent Tyler
Brent Tyler is a lawyer in Quebec, Canada, known for his frequent court challenges to "Bill 101", Quebec's Charter of the French Language temporarily disbarred in November 2011 for not completing the continuing education requirements.[1]
Career
In 2008, he challenged Quebec's Bill 104, which amended the Charter of the French Language to remove private school education in English as one of the ways that children became eligible for public school education in English, in front of the Supreme Court of Canada. In 2009, The Supreme Court ruled Bill 104 unconstitutional and gave the government of Quebec one year to put in place new rules. The Supreme Court did not grant Tyler the $100,000 in lawyer fees that he was seeking.[2]
In 2005, he lost a case in the Supreme Court where he tried to get parts of Bill 101 dealing with restrictions on eligibility for English public schools declared unconstitutional.[3] He was also involved in a 2003 case he called the "Lion and the Walrus" case, where he tried to get part of the French Language Charter that regulated the use of languages other than French on commercial signs declared unconstitutional. He won the case in provincial court but lost the appeals in front of Superior Court and the Quebec Court of Appeal.[4] The Supreme Court decided not to hear the case, to which Tyler responded that the Supreme Court "screwed up big time".[5] He applied to the United Nations to review the case. The United Nations also rejected hearing the case, stating that Tyler did not use all the arguments that he could have used when the case was in Canadian courts.[6]
Tyler was an unsuccessful candidate for the Equality Party in the 1994 Quebec provincial election in the riding of Westmount–Saint-Louis. He came fourth with 727 votes (2.17%), compared to the winner, Jacques Chagnon, who received 26,478 votes (79.2%).[7] (The Equality Party had won the Westmount-Saint-Louis riding in the previous election.[8])
From 2001 to 2004, he was president of the pro-English language lobby group, Alliance Quebec. His term as president was marked by infighting and questioning of the organization's continued relevance.[9] During his term as president, Alliance Quebec membership dropped by 50% to 1554 members, its lowest-ever number.[10] Also during his term, grants and donations to Alliance Quebec dropped from nearly $950,000 per year to less than $500,000. He resigned before his term was finished.[11] The year after he resigned, the group ran out of money and closed down.[12]
Interviewers have characterized Brent Tyler as having a "brazen, ramrod persona"[13] and he has been criticized for his "hair-trigger temper".[14] He was found guilty of a 1995 assault of a pedestrian who touched his car. The judge found that Tyler got out of his car, knocked the man over and kicked him in the head.[15] He was given a conditional discharge pending a $500 donation to charity. Tyler's argument of self-defense was rejected, the judge saying that "revenge and not self-defense more aptly described what ensued".[15] Despite losing his appeal, Tyler never admitted doing anything wrong and challenged his victim to sue him in civil court.[16]
Tyler states that his law practice has suffered due to his political activities, including his outspoken support for issues such as the partition of Quebec[16] and his controversial Bill 101 cases.[17] Some of his fees for his Bill 101 cases have been paid for by fund-raising events and donations by groups opposed to Bill 101, including: the National Citizens Coalition (then headed by current Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper), National Post editor Diane Francis, the lobby group headed by Howard Galganov and the Montreal weekly newspaper, "The Suburban".[18]
In June, 2014, Tyler announced in a press conference at the EMSB Headquarters that he will be running for the position of chair for the English Montreal School Board. [19] He dropped out of the race by email in August 2014. [20]
Tyler is a member of the Special Committee for Canadian Unity, a lobby group that existed in the 1990s and revived for one press conference during the 2014 Quebec election to encourage the federal government to intervene in the election.[21] He was evicted in 2014 for frequent late payment of his $700 monthly rent for a 6-room apartment; while Tyler accused his landlord of "intimidation" and "harassment", the Rental Board having found that the landlord was simply insisting that Mr. Tyler pay his rent on time.[22]
Notes
- ↑ Montreal Gazette (Nov. 10, 2011)
- ↑ Supreme Court of Canada: Nguyen v. Quebec (Education, Recreation and Sports), 2009 SCC 47
- ↑ Gosselin (Tutor of) v. Quebec (Attorney General), (2005) 1 S.C.R. 238, 2005 SCC 15
- ↑ Les Entreprises W.F.H. Ltee v. Attorney-General of Quebec (24 October 2001)
- ↑ Montreal Hour (5 February 2004)
- ↑ United Nations Human Rights Committee, 5 August 2005
- ↑ Director-General of Elections of Quebec
- ↑ Director-General of Elections of Quebec
- ↑ Montreal Gazette, 29 April 2002
- ↑ La Presse (5 December 2003)
- ↑ Don Macpherson, Montreal Gazette, Feb. 3, 2004
- ↑ Ottawa Citizen (20 May 2005)
- ↑ Montreal Hour (5 February 2004)
- ↑ Montreal Gazette(19 January 2003)
- 1 2 McGill Daily (17 February 2003)
- 1 2 Montreal Mirror (30 October 1997)
- ↑ Montreal Gazette (6 September 2007)
- ↑ LeDevoir (23 June 2000)
- ↑ http://thesuburban.com/news/articles/?id=article03784
- ↑ CJAD 800 (26 August 2014)
- ↑ Website of Peter Goldring, MP
- ↑ McQuillian Family Trust v. Tyler, 2014