National Post

Sinclair resolved to leave Senate in 2021

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OTTAWA• Sen. Murray Sinclair is planning to leave the upper chamber at the end of January.

The Manitoba senator says he wants to spend more time writing a memoir and to focus on his work as a legal mentor on issues involving Indigenous law in Canada.

Sinclair, 69, is the former chief commission­er of the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission, which investigat­ed and documented decades of abuse and other harms against First Nations, Metis and Inuit children at residentia­l schools in Canada.

He was also the first Indigenous judge appointed in Manitoba.

Named to the Senate in 2016 on the advice of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Sinclair sat with the Independen­t Senators Group.

He announced in August that he would be joining Cochrane Saxberg LLP, Manitoba’s largest Indigenous law firm, but said at the time he had not yet decided whether to remain in the Senate while he took on the new role.

Sinclair was entitled to remain as a senator until 2026, when he reaches the mandatory retirement age of 75. But he has said that when he was appointed, he told those close to him he would commit to at least five years as a senator.

In a statement, Sinclair said he has seen positive changes since his time at the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission.

“I leave the Senate feeling happy with how things are progressin­g and knowing that reconcilia­tion will take a long time. I will continue to work on this for the rest of my life,” he said.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS / files ?? Manitoba Sen. Murray Sinclair says he wants to commit his time to writing and work as a legal mentor.
THE CANADIAN PRESS / files Manitoba Sen. Murray Sinclair says he wants to commit his time to writing and work as a legal mentor.

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