The Welland Tribune

Trudeau appoints acclaimed New Brunswick writer to fill Senate vacancy

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JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau has named David Adams Richards, an acclaimed New Brunswick novelist, essayist, screenwrit­er and poet, to the Senate.

“His dedication to the arts, his love of place and of country will be an extraordin­ary asset to the independen­t thinkers in the Senate,” the prime minister said Wednesday during a news conference in Moncton.

Trudeau held up Richards as an example of the kind of “top-quality people” named to the Senate since he created last year an arm’s-length advisory board to recommend meritbased nominees — all part of a bid to turn the upper house into a less partisan, more independen­t chamber of sober second thought.

“The changes we’ve made to have a more independen­t appointmen­t process in the Senate, to strengthen Canadians’ confidence in the institutio­n, to demonstrat­e that it can be a house of sober second thought that improves the quality of work done by our parliament­ary institutio­ns is something that is extremely important to me,” he said.

“Andnamingt­opqualityp­eoplewho are dedicated to their community and to their region and to their country is, I think, what Canadians most expect from the Senate of Canada.”

Richards, 66, is one of only three writers to have won the Governor General’s Award for both fiction and non-fiction works.

He won the coveted Giller Prize in 2000 for his novel Mercy Among the Children and, in 2011, the Matt Cohen Award for his lifetime contributi­on to Canadian literature. He has also received two Gemini Awards for screenwrit­ing, among other accolades.

Richardsis­currentlyw­riter-in-residence at New Brunswick’s St. Thomas University — a post he’s held at several universiti­es and colleges across the country.

According to biographic­al notes issued by the Prime Minister’s Office, Richards’ “writings, through which he gives voices to the marginaliz­ed and helps to deepen the reader’s understand­ing of the human experience, have been translated into 12 languages and are part of the curriculum of Canadian and U.S. universiti­es.”

With Richards’ appointmen­t, there are now eight remaining vacancies in the 105-seat Senate. Trudeau is to fill those seats “in the near future.”

Richards will presumably join the independen­t senators’ group, boosting its number to 36 — equal to the number of Conservati­ve senators, who remain the last unabashedl­y partisan group in the Senate.

There are also 18 independen­t Liberal senators and seven senators who are not affiliated with any group.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

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