Preston Jordan Lim, Villanova University Charles Widger School of Law, has posted The Great Depression and Canada's Major Originalist Decade, which is forthcoming in the Osgoode Hall Law Journal:
Few periods of Canadian history have been as momentous or terrible as the Great Depression. The Dominion and provincial governments’ inability to combat financial and environmental catastrophe led many Canadians to openly question the appropriateness of their constitutional framework. As legal historians have since documented, many leading jurists of the time believed that a strong central government could, through the institution of national programs, contain the Great Depression; in the eyes of these 1930s jurists, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council—then Canada’s apex court—had sapped the federal government of its powers by misinterpreting the British North America Act, 1867.--Dan Ernst
Although scholars have correctly identified the Great Depression as a period of intellectual ferment and even revolution, none has fully accounted for the prevalence of originalist thought in the legal debates of the time. In response to the Great Depression, the major legal thinkers and reformers of the 1930s deployed originalist arguments. They criticized the Privy Council for having departed from the original intentions of the Fathers of Confederation and the original meaning of the Constitution. While the leading jurists of the period all tended to employ originalist reasoning, they often disagreed on interpretive outcomes. Thus, while many jurists used originalist reasoning to argue in favour of a strong central government, some argued that the original intentions of the Framers and the original public meaning of constitutional provisions favoured a federalist interpretation of the British North America Act. I conclude that the dominance of originalism during the legal debates of the 1930s bears several lessons for modern constitutional theorists. The fact, for example, that jurists of all ideological backgrounds employed originalist logic demonstrates that the characterization of originalism as inherently conservative makes little sense in the Canadian context.