Friday, June 5, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quicksketch: A look at Canada's next governor general, Louise Arbour

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 05 May, 2026 04:40 PM
  • Quicksketch: A look at Canada's next governor general, Louise Arbour

Louise Arbour has been named as Canada's next governor general to replace Mary Simon, who was appointed to the role in 2021 on the advice of former prime minister Justin Trudeau. She is expected to formally assume the role in a ceremony in early June.

Here's a look at the country's newest head of state.

Age: 79

Hometown: Montreal

Previous career: Arbour was called to the bar in Quebec in 1971 and in Ontario in 1977, launching a career that saw her rise to the highest ranks of the national and international legal systems.

Arbour first taught at York University's Osgoode Hall law school. She was appointed to the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in 1987 and to the province's Court of Appeal in 1990. 

She led a commission of inquiry into events at the Kingston Prison for Women in 1995. Between 1996 and 1999, Arbour was chief prosecutor for the International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and for Rwanda in The Hague. 

Upon her return to Canada following the tribunals, she was appointed by former prime minister Jean Chrétien to the Supreme Court of Canada, where she served until 2004. Arbour was then the UN High Commissioner of Human Rights for four years, ending in 2008. 

More recently, she served at the request of former prime minister Justin Trudeau's government to lead an independent review into sexual harassment and misconduct in the Canadian Armed Forces. Her report was released in 2022, called for sweeping reforms to the military's culture and institutions. 

As viceregal, Arbour will assume the role of commander-in-chief of Canada's military.

Quote: "I will accede to a function in which I will be the representative of the Crown in a constitutional arrangement that I think has served Canada extremely well throughout our history, but even more in recent decades. I think, a system that will continue to provide continuity in our institutions and our form of governance."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology
The Office of the Auditor General of B.C. says in the report that defined methodologies to calculate forest carbon projections were not used for decisions such as the determining annual allowable timber cutting. 

Audit finds B.C.'s forest management hurt by flawed data without clear methodology

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors
A Vancouver Police officer will not be charged over a fatal shooting in a city rooming house in May 2022.  The British Columbia Prosecution Service says in a statement the shooting happened at the Patricia Hotel in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside shortly after staff called 911 to report a resident assaulting others with a stick.

No charges for Vancouver officer involved in fatal 2022 shooting: prosecutors

Assault charges for man accused of bear-spraying Mounties in Nanaimo

Assault charges for man accused of bear-spraying Mounties in Nanaimo
RCMP have arrested a man who allegedly bear-sprayed two officers in Nanaimo. Police say they were called out Saturday afternoon to a report of a man throwing an axe into the back of a passing truck.

Assault charges for man accused of bear-spraying Mounties in Nanaimo

Inflation's surprise jump could push Bank of Canada to pause rate cuts

Inflation's surprise jump could push Bank of Canada to pause rate cuts
Statistics Canada said Tuesday that the annual rate of inflation accelerated sharply to 2.6 per cent in February as the federal government’s temporary tax break came to an end mid-month.

Inflation's surprise jump could push Bank of Canada to pause rate cuts

Annual inflation rate jumps to 2.6% in February with tax holiday end: StatCan

Annual inflation rate jumps to 2.6% in February with tax holiday end: StatCan
The annual rate of inflation accelerated sharply to 2.6 per cent in February as the federal government’s temporary tax break came to an end mid-month, Statistics Canada said Tuesday. February’s figures are well ahead of the consensus among economists polled by Reuters, which called for 2.2 per cent inflation in the month.

Annual inflation rate jumps to 2.6% in February with tax holiday end: StatCan

Four to be charged after organized crime-related police operation in Kanesatake

Four to be charged after organized crime-related police operation in Kanesatake
Sgt. Marc Tessier says police arrested three men in their forties along with a 31-year-old woman and seized drugs and weapons in Kanesatake, about 40 kilometres northwest of Montreal. Tessier says a fifth person detained by police was released.

Four to be charged after organized crime-related police operation in Kanesatake