Friday, January 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

RCMP's First Turbaned Officer Baltej Dhillon Among Three Newly Appointed Senators

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Feb, 2025 06:24 PM
  • RCMP's First Turbaned Officer Baltej Dhillon Among Three Newly Appointed Senators

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced the appointment of three new independent senators to fill some of the Senate's few remaining vacancies.

The Prime Minister's Office says in a news release that the Governor General has appointed Baltej Dhillon for British Columbia, Martine Hébert for Quebec and Todd Lewis for Saskatchewan.

Dhillon has worked with British Columbia’s anti-gang agency since 2019 and, in 1991, became the first Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer to wear a turban.

Hébert is an economist and former Quebec diplomat, and Lewis is a fourth-generation farmer and the vice-president of the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. 

There were 22 vacancies in the Senate when Trudeau became prime minister in 2015, with his government establishing a "new, non-partisan, merit-based process" to advise on appointments.

The news release says there have been 93 independent appointments to the Senate made on the advice of Trudeau.

The Senate of Canada website indicates that seven vacancies remain, following the appointment of the three new senators. A dozen Senate appointments were made in 2024.

A new Liberal party leader is set to replace Trudeau on March 9.

On Friday, Trudeau appointed Omar Alghabra, member of Parliament for Mississauga Centre, as Canada’s new Special Envoy for Syria.

Image Credits: instagram/baltej.s.dhillon

MORE National ARTICLES

Amid U.S. tariff threats, a fight may be brewing over Canadian supply management

Amid U.S. tariff threats, a fight may be brewing over Canadian supply management
The federal government and the Canadian dairy industry are vowing to protect the country’s supply management system in the face of threats from the United States.  But some observers, and even some who work in the industry, say Canada will have to consider changes to the decades-old system that controls the supply of dairy products to appease a combative Trump administration. 

Amid U.S. tariff threats, a fight may be brewing over Canadian supply management

Police say YouTuber caught speeding on Vancouver Island loses car for a week

Police say YouTuber caught speeding on Vancouver Island loses car for a week
Mounties on Vancouver Island say a man who described himself as a YouTube influencer had his vehicle impounded and was fined $368 for speeding. Police say an unmarked BC Highway Patrol officer was working Sunday in Lantzville when he heard an "excessively loud" vehicle accelerate from a stoplight on Highway 19.

Police say YouTuber caught speeding on Vancouver Island loses car for a week

California builders say few alternatives to Canadian timber, despite tariff threat

California builders say few alternatives to Canadian timber, despite tariff threat
California homebuilders say they have few options but to keep buying Canadian lumber, even if it's hit with 25 per cent tariffs, as they rebuild thousands of homes destroyed by devastating wildfires in Los Angeles.

California builders say few alternatives to Canadian timber, despite tariff threat

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking
A recent B.C. Ministry of Health document says a "significant portion" of opioids prescribed by doctors and pharmacists are being diverted and that prescribed alternatives are being trafficked provincially, nationally and internationally.

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking

2 arrested in catalytic converter theft

2 arrested in catalytic converter theft
Mounties in Burnaby say two women have been arrested after stealing a catalytic converter from a van in a parking lot in the area of Brighton Avenue and Lougheed Highway. They say that on January 22nd, officers responded to reports of the women underneath the vehicle, but the pair left the scene before they arrived. 

2 arrested in catalytic converter theft

Talk of changing Vancouver's supportive housing policy has organizations on edge

Talk of changing Vancouver's supportive housing policy has organizations on edge
Mayor Ken Sim announced last month that he would be putting forward a proposal to pause construction of net new supportive housing units in Vancouver, arguing that the city needs to focus on updating its current stock, while supply in other parts of the region increases.

Talk of changing Vancouver's supportive housing policy has organizations on edge