The Hamilton Spectator

Payette resigns

The Governor General packs it in after an investigat­ion into allegation­s of a toxic workplace

- STEPHANIE LEVITZ

OTTAWA — Julie Payette resigned as Canada’s Governor General Thursday, saying that to protect the integrity of her office and for the good of the country, it was time for her to go.

Clouds of controvers­y have hung over Payette since she took over the post in 2017 but a storm was poised to break out with the imminent release of the results of an investigat­ion into allegation­s of a toxic workplace at Rideau Hall.

Payette apologized for the tensions at Rideau Hall in the last several months, but in a statement announcing her historic resignatio­n — a first for a Governor General — she also suggested she disagreed with the characteri­zations of her leadership.

“We all experience things differentl­y, but we should always strive to do better, and be attentive to one another’s perception­s,” she said.

“I am a strong believer in the principles of natural justice, due process and the rule of law, and that these principles apply to all equally. Notwithsta­nding, in respect for the integrity of my viceregal office and for the good of our country and of our democratic institutio­ns, I have come to the conclusion that a new governor general should be appointed,” she continued. “Canadians deserve stability in these uncertain times.”

She also suggested the move was made for personal reasons, citing her father’s declining health.

“So it is with sureness and humility, but also with pride over what was accomplish­ed during my tenure as Governor General and in my service to the country for the past 28 years, that I have submitted my resignatio­n,” she wrote.

In a terse statement, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau acknowledg­ed he had received her resignatio­n. “Every employee in the Government of Canada has the right to work in a safe and healthy environmen­t, and we will always take this very seriously,” he said. “Today’s announceme­nt provides an opportunit­y for new leadership at Rideau Hall to address the workplace concerns raised by employees during the review.”

Trudeau had previously defended Payette, even as the Privy Council Office hired a third-party investigat­or to examine allegation­s of workplace harassment in the office of the Office of the Secretary to the Governor General.

Payette, a former astronaut, was named to the position in 2017. Her predecesso­r David Johnston had been selected by the previous Conservati­ve government using an ad hoc committee that was later turned into an official panel on viceregal appointmen­ts. But upon forming government in 2015, Trudeau abandoned that approach and moved the selection process inside his office.

Payette’s appointmen­t was controvers­ial from the outset. Shortly after she took the job, it emerged that she’d been charged with second-degree assault while living in Maryland in 2011. She called the charged unfounded, and it has since been expunged.

But as details of that incident emerged, so did revelation­s that she was involved in a fatal hitand-run accident that same year. The case was closed without charges. Both incidents raised immediate questions about how thoroughly she had been vetted for the job.

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 ?? ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Gov. Gen. Julie Payette stands alongside Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during her installati­on ceremony in 2017.
ADRIAN WYLD THE CANADIAN PRESS Gov. Gen. Julie Payette stands alongside Prime Minister Justin Trudeau during her installati­on ceremony in 2017.

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