Lethbridge Herald

Trudeau names nine new senators

INDEPENDEN­TS’ CONTROL OVER SENATE IMMINENT WITH PM POISED TO FILL 21 VACANCIES

- Joan Bryden THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has named nine new, non-partisan senators, bringing him within reach of his goal to transform the discredite­d Senate into a more reputable, independen­t chamber of sober second thought.

The five women and four men hail from a wide variety of background­s, from an art historian to a renowned human rights lawyer to a conservati­onist. All will sit as independen­ts in the Senate.

They are the first senators to be chosen under an arm’s-length process that saw more than 2,700 people apply to fill the 21 vacancies in the 105-seat upper house.

Trudeau is poised to announce two more batches of appointmen­ts within days, filling the remaining 12 empty seats — six from Quebec, six from Ontario — and, for the first time, putting senators with no partisan affiliatio­n in the driver’s seat.

When he’s done, independen­t senators will hold a plurality of 44 seats, outnumberi­ng the Conservati­ves’ 40 and the independen­t Liberals’ 21.

Trudeau called the appointmen­t process “merit based and open.”

“It is part of our ongoing efforts to make the Senate more modern and independen­t and ensure that its members have the depth of knowledge and experience to best serve Canadians,” he said in a statement Thursday.

But while a premium is supposed to be put on merit, the new process does not preclude people who’ve been involved in partisan politics. And at least three of the newcomers have some links to federal politics, although none would qualify as “hacks, flacks and bagmen,” the sobriquet that used to be routinely applied to senators.

Manitoba lawyer and human rights activist Marilou McPhedran has regularly contribute­d small donations to Trudeau’s Liberal party, totalling just over $1,400 in 2015 and $825 so far this year, according to Elections Canada’s contributi­ons data base.

Another Manitoba appointee, art historian Patricia Bovey, is the widow of the late John Harvard, a former Liberal MP who served as the province’s lieutenant governor.

Prince Edward Island conservati­onist Diane Griffin, meanwhile, appears to have donated $250 to the Green Party in 2013 and just less than $250 to the Conservati­ve party in 2014.

The other new senators do not appear to have donated to any federal party over the past five years. They are:

• Yuen Pau Woo, former president of the Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada and currently senior fellow in public policy at the Asian Institute of Research at the University of British Columbia.

• Winnipeg psychiatri­st and palliative care expert Harvey Chochinov.

• New Brunswick francophon­e Rene Cormier, president of the Societe Nationale de l’Acadie, the lead organizati­on for the internatio­nal strategy for the promotion of Acadian artists.

• New Brunswick women’s issues expert Nancy Hartling.

• Nova Scotia social worker and educator Wanda Thomas Bernard, the first African-Canadian to be promoted to full professor at Dalhousie University.

• Daniel Christmas, senior adviser for the Mi’kmaw First Nation of Membertou, N.S.

Trudeau took the first step toward transformi­ng the Senate in January 2014, when he kicked senators out of the Liberal caucus in a bid to diminish the hyper-partisansh­ip he maintained had destroyed the Senate’s intended role as an independen­t chamber of sober second thought.

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