Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Toews may head to Manitoba court

- BRUCE OWEN

WINNIPEG — Public Safety Minister Vic Toews is destined for a new job on Manitoba’s highest court, sources say

here are nine judges on the Manitoba Court of Appeal — one works part time — but one is due to retire shortly when he hits the compulsory retirement age of 75.

There is also one opening on the Court of Queen’s Bench that needs filling.

Sources say Toews is in line for the Court of Appeal opening, but it’s an appointmen­t that does not have to be made immediatel­y.

Judges on the Appeal Court and Queen’s Bench are federally appointed through the Office of the Commission­er for Federal Judicial Affairs Canada. The Queen’s Bench and Appeal Court vacancies are to be filled at the same time.

This is the second time it has been said the senior Manitoba cabinet minister is in line for appointmen­t to the bench.

The last time was four years ago, when justice sources said he was to fill a Queen’s Bench opening.

However, Toews continued to serve in cabinet under Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Toews has been justice minister and minister responsibl­e for the Treasury Board.

Before entering provincial politics in the mid-’90s, Toews was a provincial Crown attorney specializi­ng in constituti­onal law. He made the jump to federal politics in 2000.

Recently, Toews said he had no plans to retire when asked if he’ll run in the 2015 federal election.

“I keep hearing all the time that I’m retiring, and your newspaper is the one that keeps on saying it,” he said.

“Also, I have to sort of shrug my shoulders and say, ‘You must know something that I don’t know.’ That’s all I can say.”

Toews garnered public criticism earlier this year after introducin­g what’s been dubbed an Internet snooping bill.

He told a Liberal MP in the House of Commons in February he could either stand with the government in support of Bill C-30, the Protecting Children from Internet Predators Act, or “with the child pornograph­ers.”

The bill, which would require telecommun­ications companies to hand over customer informatio­n to police without a court order, was swiftly sent to committee, where it could be reworked.

The fallout from Toews’ comment and the bill resulted in the Vikileaks affair in which details of his divorce were released on Twitter.

More recently, it was rumoured he would be part of a cabinet shuffle following the resignatio­n of Internatio­nal Co-operation Minister Bev Oda, who leaves office at the end of the month.

Oda has been replaced by Ontario MP Julian Fantino.

Harper told an Alberta radio host this week he’s holding off on a wider cabinet shuffle until next year.

 ?? Vic Toews ??
Vic Toews

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