Monday, February 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Transgender Judge In Manitoba Credits Hard Work For His Appointment

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Dec, 2015 12:22 PM
    WINNIPEG — Canada's first known transgender judge credits his new position to lots of hard work and a determination to simply be himself.
     
    Judge Kael McKenzie says when he learned of his appointment to Manitoba provincial court, he felt a surge of elation and pride that he quickly shared with his wife and two teenage sons.
     
    They are as thrilled as he is, he says.
     
    "I have been working really hard for my entire adult life in all kinds of areas and I have continually strived to improve myself," McKenzie said Monday.
     
    "The appointment is much more than being a trans man. I feel like my efforts have been rewarded."
     
    McKenzie, 44, made the transition from woman to man a few years ago.
     
    What didn't change was his drive to improve himself and contribute to the community.
     
    He remembers joining Sea Cadets and playing lots of sports before coming out as a lesbian in his teens to people close to him.
     
    Keeping his sexuality a secret, McKenzie joined the Canadian Forces and served six years in the navy as a communications and research analyst.
     
    He worked as a campus police officer while studying at the University of Manitoba.
     
    After practising family, commercial and civil law, he worked as a Manitoba Crown attorney for five years.
     
    McKenzie, who is Metis, has volunteered for organizations that include the North American Indigenous Games, the Canadian Bar Association and Winnipeg's Rainbow Resource Centre.
     
    The trans community and others are holding him out as a role model. People he has never met before are sending messages of support.
     
    "They are like, 'Thank you. My son or daughter is transitioning and it means so much.' People, just complete strangers, saying thank you. I have had a number of trans people who have said, 'See, we can do anything — people are people,'" he said.
     
    "It is overwhelming to think that you can have this type of impact on someone's life just from being yourself and working hard."
     
    Like anyone else, his life experiences are bound to affect how he does his job, he said. But he is emphatic that he is not a token. 
     
    McKenzie said he's had only a few negative responses from  anonymous people, who have posted remarks on websites and questioned why his appointment is news.
     
    "Why is this news? Until it isn't news anymore, it is news." 
     
    Mike Tutthill, executive director of the Rainbow centre, said Winnipeg's LGBTQ community is excited about McKenzie's appointment.
     
    However, people are being realistic that this is the story of one trans person, he said. Barriers to employment still exist for many.
     
    "While we are celebrating this, we are also really aware that there is still lots of work to do." 
     
    Manitoba Attorney General Gord Mackintosh told McKenzie of his appointment on Thursday as part of the province's goal to increase diversity on the bench.
     
    Mackintosh said that according to the Manitoba Bar Association, McKenzie is the first known transgender judge in Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Public Safety Minister Speaks On Terrorism Threat, Student International Travel

    Public Safety Minister Speaks On Terrorism Threat, Student International Travel
    EDMONTON — Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says he knows of no reason why school boards should cancel international student trips over terrorism fears, but he says the decision is ultimately up to educators.

    Public Safety Minister Speaks On Terrorism Threat, Student International Travel

    New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business

    New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business
    Richmond said the non-stop service "opens up" the Latin American market with the airline's "great onward network connections."

    New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business

    B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

     An evangelical Christian university under fire across the country for forbidding sexual intimacy outside of heterosexual marriage has secured a decisive legal victory in its effort to open a law school in British Columbia.

    B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison
    Ensaf Haidar tells Amnesty International her husband began it on Tuesday to protest the move.

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples
    PARIS — Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has expressed deep concerns about opposition at the international climate conference to what she called a "critically important" issue — the rights of Aboriginal Peoples.

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1
    RCMP say the truck was travelling westbound in an eastbound lane when it collided head-on with a semi-truck just before midnight on Tuesday.

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1