Montreal

Supreme Court sides with Ottawa in $57B EI surplus case

The Supreme Court of Canada has sided with the federal government in a long-running legal fight with Quebec's leading labour organizations in a multi-billion-dollar employment insurance case.

Quebec unions sued government after it closed old EI account and transferred funds to itself

Protesters opposing employment insurance reform demonstrated in Montreal on Saturday, April 27, 2013. (Graham Hughes/CP)

The Supreme Court of Canada has sided with the federal government in a long-running legal fight with Quebec's leading labour organizations in a multi-billion-dollar employment insurance case.

The unions sued the Harper government after it decided in 2010 to close the old employment insurance account and transfer the $57 billion balance into the government's general revenues.

The Confédération des syndicats nationaux said the move was unconstitutional.

The court, however, agreed with the federal argument that it had the authority to do this because the matter was dealt with in a 2008 Supreme Court decision.

A lower court sided with the federal government, but the Quebec Court of Appeal overturned that and the government appealed to the Supreme Court.

The justices say the original judge in the case was right to dismiss the union suit because it was bound to fail.