Toronto Star

Tory appointees respond to resignatio­n call

Those whose posts were renewed during Harper term could quit or face hearings

- BRUCE CHEADLE

OTTAWA— The federal Liberal government says a “significan­t number” of Conservati­ve appointees have offered to step down after being asked to quit, while others will be called before parliament­ary committees to explain their credential­s.

But the Prime Minister’s Office is refusing to provide even a numerical breakdown, citing privacy concerns for the individual­s involved.

That’s a sharp reversal from earlier this month, when government House leader Dominic LeBlanc announced he’d sent letters to 33 people who had been given pre-election appointmen­t renewals by the former Harper government, which the Liberals said amounted to an “abuse of process.”

LeBlanc said he wanted their voluntary resignatio­ns and gave them until Dec. 18 to respond.

“Generally speaking, a large majority of the 33 appointees answered, with a significan­t number of them offering to step down,” PMO spokeswoma­n Andrée-Lyne Hallé said Wednesday in an email.

“It will now be up to ministers to pursue the process with individual appointees.”

At issue are previous government appointmen­ts to boards and tribunals that were due to expire after the Oct. 19 federal election — some of them many months after the election — but were renewed in advance by the Conservati­ves before last summer’s election call. Among those appointed were members of the Immigratio­n and Refugee Board, the National Energy Board and Via Rail’s board of directors, as well as top executives at Canada Post and Telefilm Canada.

Out of 33 appointees identified in news reports as having received letters from LeBlanc, 19 had been reappointe­d under good behaviour provisions, meaning they can only be removed with cause.

Others were appointed at pleasure, meaning their appointmen­ts can be terminated without reason.

The Prime Minister’s Office says those who were appointed under good behaviour, but who have refused to voluntaril­y resign, will be referred to parliament­ary committees for hearings.

“The committee may call the ap- pointee to appear, however the committees do not have the power to overturn appointmen­ts,” PMO spokesman Oliver Duchesneau said in an email.

Duchesneau added for “those individual­s who offered their resignatio­n or were appointed at pleasure, their response will be referred to the responsibl­e minister, who will be communicat­ing with them directly.”

LeBlanc has said the letters are not a judgment on any of the individual appointees. Rather, he said the new government considers the way the appointmen­ts were made to be illegitima­te, due to lack of transparen­cy and parliament­ary scrutiny.

That’s not good enough, interim Conservati­ve Leader Rona Ambrose said in an email.

“The Liberal approach here has impugned the integrity of qualified people for no good reason,” Ambrose said.

Two of the contested appointees who received letters — both directors of national museums — have already confirmed that they’ve received assurances from federal Heritage Minister Melanie Joly that she “strongly supports their renominati­on.”

Margaret Beckel, the director of the Canadian Museum of Nature, and Mark O’Neill, director of the Canadian Museum of History, received the assurances on Dec. 23, according to the Ottawa Citizen.

 ??  ?? House leader Dominic LeBlanc sent letters to Tory appointees asking them to resign voluntaril­y.
House leader Dominic LeBlanc sent letters to Tory appointees asking them to resign voluntaril­y.

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