Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Memo To Trudeau Prods Liberals To Look At Reviving Vice-Regal Appointments Board

The Canadian Press, 24 Jan, 2020 09:52 PM
  • Memo To Trudeau Prods Liberals To Look At Reviving Vice-Regal Appointments Board

OTTAWA - Senior officials advising Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have pressed him gently to rethink how the Liberals have chosen the Queen's representatives in Canada as he gets ready to make another such decision.

 

The task of coming up with candidates for vice-regal appointments — including Gov. Gen. Julie Payette, who was named in 2017 — has been with the Prime Minister's Office and its bureaucratic arm, the Privy Council Office after the Liberals abandoned a previously used outside advisory board.

 

A memo given to Trudeau shortly after the Liberals won re-election last fall suggests the process could be ready for a change.

 

The memo, which The Canadian Press obtained through the Access to Information Act, says that Trudeau could consider "re-engaging" the advisory committee to "give greater structure to the identification of potential candidates."

 

Already, Trudeau has a vice-regal appointment that needs to be made.

 

Ontario Lt.-Gov. Elizabeth Dowdeswell reached the end of her five-year term during the federal election, when it would have been politically inappropriate for Trudeau to name her successor. She will remain in the position until her replacement is named.

 

Three more vice-regal appointments will likely be needed by the end of 2020, as the five-year terms for the lieutenant-governors of Alberta, Manitoba and Quebec are set to expire.

 

The PMO had not yet responded to a request for comment about the appointments process Friday afternoon.

 

Under the Conservatives, there had been an advisory committee to offer up names for the governor general and provincial lieutenant-governors. The list wasn't binding, but it was developed through detailed consideration by experts about what the job entailed and who would make a good candidate.

 

Former prime minister Stephen Harper first created an ad hoc advisory committee when his government needed to find a new governor general in 2010, a process that led to the choice of David Johnston for the top job at Rideau Hall.

 

Harper, like Trudeau now, had a minority government, making the role of representative to the Queen key to maintaining some parliamentary stability.

 

Harper made the committee a permanent body in 2012, arguing that a non-partisan approach to vice-regal appointments was important for the country.

 

According to the memo, the advisory committee hasn't met since 2015. Instead, the Liberals pulled the process inside the PMO, despite using independent advisory boards to recommend names for both the Senate and the Supreme Court.

 

Penny Collenette, who was former prime minister Jean Chretien's director of appointments for four years, said it's often easy to come up with a list of eminent Canadians for vice-regal positions — the Order of Canada or similar provincial honours is a place to start — but tougher to get agreement on a successful candidate.

 

Whether it's an advisory committee, or within the PMO, the key is to consult widely and ensure discretion, Collenette said, pointing to the onerous gag order imposed on anyone called about a judicial appointment.

 

"There's not a perfect process," said Collenette, now an adjunct law professor at the University of Ottawa.

 

"It helps to consult as widely as possible, providing people are discreet. It's not helpful if you consult widely and then it turns into gossip."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Newfoundland Study Of Bird Droppings May Answer Critical Conservation Questions

Newfoundland Study Of Bird Droppings May Answer Critical Conservation Questions
A team of Canadian scientists may have cracked one of the toughest problems in conservation by peering into the lives of long-ago seabirds through 1,700 years of droppings.

Newfoundland Study Of Bird Droppings May Answer Critical Conservation Questions

Volkswagen Pleads Guilty To All Canadian Charges In Emissions-Cheating Scandal

The German automaker and the Crown submitted an agreed statement of facts in a Toronto court, acknowledging the company imported 128,000 Volkswagen and Audi vehicles, along with 2,000 Porsches, that violated the standards.    

Volkswagen Pleads Guilty To All Canadian Charges In Emissions-Cheating Scandal

Feds, Ontario Sign Funding Deal For French-language University In Toronto

An agreement signed today says the two will spend $126 million on the project over eight years.

Feds, Ontario Sign Funding Deal For French-language University In Toronto

One Dead, Five French Tourists Missing After Snowmobiles Break Through Ice In Quebec

One Dead, Five French Tourists Missing After Snowmobiles Break Through Ice In Quebec
Police say the victim — a 42-year-old Quebec man who was serving as a guide to a group of eight tourists from France — died several hours after being admitted to hospital.

One Dead, Five French Tourists Missing After Snowmobiles Break Through Ice In Quebec

Incompetent Ontario Doctor Who Twice Sent Dying Infant Home Loses Licence

Incompetent Ontario Doctor Who Twice Sent Dying Infant Home Loses Licence
A family doctor who sent a dying infant home with instructions to give him water and juice with vitamin C and who failed to report criminal driving convictions has been stripped of his medical licence.

Incompetent Ontario Doctor Who Twice Sent Dying Infant Home Loses Licence

Rookie Ontario MP Derek Sloan Says He's Running For Conservative Leadership

OTTAWA - A rookie MP from Ontario says he's going to enter the Conservative leadership race.

Rookie Ontario MP Derek Sloan Says He's Running For Conservative Leadership