Close X
Friday, September 20, 2024
ADVT 
National

Eminent Canadians To Advise Justin Trudeau On Merit Based Appointments To Senate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2016 12:02 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government has tapped eminent Canadians from academe, the civil service, medicine, law, arts and sports to advise Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on merit-based appointments to the maligned Senate.
     
    The independent advisory board on Senate appointments will be chaired by Huguette Labelle, a former deputy minister in various federal departments and former chancellor of the University of Ottawa.
     
    She'll be joined by two other permanent members: McGill University dean of law Daniel Jutras and former University of Alberta president Indira Samarasekera.
     
    The board is to recommend a short list of five nominees for each vacancy in the upper house, of which there are currently 22.
     
    The government has also named two ad hoc members from each of the three provinces — Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba — whose vacant Senate seats are to be filled first.
     
    Trudeau intends to name a government leader in the Senate from among the first five appointees, whom the government hopes to have in place by the end of February.
     
    Ontario's ad hoc members are former provincial senior public servant Murray Segal and Dawn Lavell Harvard, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada; Quebec's are Yves Lamontagne, president of the province's college of physicians, and one-time Olympic diving gold medallist Sylvie Bernier; Manitoba's are singer-songwriter Heather Bishop and Susan Lewis, former president of the United Way of Winnipeg.
     
    Provincial governments were invited to recommend names to fill the ad hoc positions but while Ontario and Quebec participated, insiders say Manitoba's NDP government, which supports abolition of the Senate, did not.
     
    The advisory board is the first step towards delivering on Trudeau's promise to return the scandal-plagued Senate to its intended role as an independent chamber of sober second thought.
     
    Democratic Institutions Minister Maryam Monsef said the calibre of people named to the advisory board is indicative the kind of people Trudeau wants to populate the Senate.
     
    "I believe we're on the right track in ensuring that ... senators are there because of merit and that they will help tone down the partisanship that has hampered the effectiveness of the Senate in the recent past," she said following a cabinet retreat in St. Andrews, N.B.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department
    EDMONTON — Alberta Premier Rachel Notley says a ban on document shredding will continue in the Environment Department until she is sure no more documents are improperly destroyed.

    Alberta's Rachel Notley Says Document Shredding Ban Continues At Environment Department

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks
    Wildfires scorched a record amount of Canada's national parks last year — the latest in a number of long, hot summers that have almost entirely depleted Parks Canada's firefighting reserve.

    Firefighting Funds Depleted: Record Number Of Wildfires In National Parks

    Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death

    Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death
    The top court is holding an oral hearing today on the Trudeau government's request for a six-month extension to deal with the issue.

    Premier Kathleen Wynne Says Ontario Is Preparing Protocols For Physician-Assisted Death

    Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job

    Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job
    Ayaan Farah, 31, says Ottawa unfairly revoked her Transportation Security Clearance a year ago, leading to her firing from her full-time job of eight years.

    Somali-Canadian Woman Fights Revocation Of Security Clearance That Cost Her Airline Job

    Justin Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island

    Justin  Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island
    The visit to Nevis, a small island that is part of the twin-island Federation of St. Kitts and Nevis, was billed as a private family vacation, but it has become fodder for celebrity gossip website TMZ.

    Justin Trudeau Makes The Tabloids For His Family Vacation On Small Caribbean Island

    Government Pleads For More Time To Craft Assisted-Death Law

    Government Pleads For More Time To Craft Assisted-Death Law
    Robert Frater, counsel for the attorney general, said the federal government needs a six-month extended window to provide a comprehensive response to the judgment.

    Government Pleads For More Time To Craft Assisted-Death Law