Cape Breton Post

Conservati­ves’ petition wants resigning governors general cut off

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OTTAWA — A Conservati­ve MP and senator have launched a House of Commons petition calling for the government to block governors general such as Julie Payette from receiving their generous pension if they prematurel­y leave their post.

“When someone leaves their job, they are not entitled to employment insurance. Why should Julie Payette be entitled to a lifetime pension? I invite all Canadians that are as shocked as we are by this unacceptab­le situation to sign and share this petition,” Conservati­ve MP Luc Berthold said in a statement.

The Quebec MP is sponsoring the official House of Commons petition on behalf of his Conservati­ve senator colleague Claude Carignan, who tabled a private member's bill two weeks ago that would financiall­y cut off any governor general who leaves the job for non-medical reasons before the end of the five-year mandate.

The new petition calls for the federal government to essentiall­y enact the changes contained in Carignan's bill, which would make only governors general who finish their mandate eligible for pension and benefits and cancel any payments to former viceroys who resigned before the end of their term.

In other words, the bill would affect only one person: Julie Payette.

Payette became the first governor general in Canadian history to resign from the post in January after a workplace review concluded she oversaw a toxic, verbally abusive workplace at Rideau Hall. The 57-year-old former astronaut had another 22 months to go in her term.

After Postmedia News reported on his bill two weeks ago, Carignan says he was “inundated” with messages of support from Canadians all across the country who were “shocked” by the fact that Payette still receives full pension and benefits, despite resigning.

Legislatio­n called the Governor General's Act states that anyone who held the role is eligible for a lifetime annuity, no matter when or how they leave the job. It currently stands at $149,484, but is set to rise slowly over time.

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