Toronto Star

Supreme Court nominee disappoint­s diversity advocates

Critics say Trudeau missed an opportunit­y to choose an indigenous or black judge

- MICHAEL TUTTON THE CANADIAN PRESS

HALIFAX— The Liberal government may have made history by nominating a Newfoundla­nder to Canada’s top court — but disappoint­ed advocates say a more critical opportunit­y has been missed to add racial diversity to Canada’s predominan­tly white judiciary.

“It’s another white male . . . It’s the exact thing we’ve been doing for years,” said Koren Lightening-Earle, president of the Indigenous Bar Associatio­n, adding she would have been “borderline happy with any person of colour.”

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Monday that Justice Malcolm Rowe from Newfoundla­nd and Labrador has been nominated for the Supreme Court of Canada.

If formally named to the court, it will be a historic first for the province.

However, scholars and aboriginal jurists had hoped Trudeau’s new selection process might set aside the constituti­onal convention of regionally based appointmen­ts, and focus on putting an aboriginal or black judge into the job.

Lightening-Earle said while Newfoundla­nders and Labradoria­ns have waited a number of decades for a representa­tive on the court, aboriginal Canadians have deeper historic claims to a place in the judiciary.

“They (Newfoundla­nd and Labrador residents) have been waiting a long time, but we’ve been waiting a little bit longer,” she said.

Lightening-Earle said in a telephone interview a rare opportunit­y has been missed, and indigenous lawyers are wondering why they bothered applying to the advisory board for the position.

A report in Policy Options magazine estimated earlier this year that just 1per cent of Canada’s 2,160 judges in the provincial superior and lower courts are aboriginal, while 3 per cent are racial minorities — prompting a Dalhousie University law professor to describe the Canadian bench as a “judiciary of whiteness.”

Robert Wright, a black social worker who has served on a Nova Scotia board that recommends judicial appointmen­ts, said the announceme­nt is a disappoint­ment given the Trudeau government’s earlier signals it might adjust the system.

“There are an increasing number of Canadians who . . . are not caught up in what I call the historical regional nature of the various Canadian identities we used to focus on,” he said in a telephone interview from Halifax.

Wright argues the principle of diversity that lies beneath appointing people from different regions need- ed to be shifted to recognize the increasing number of Canadians from diverse ethnic and racial background­s.

He said as a black Nova Scotian, he would have been content to see a black person from any part of the country elevated to the bench and he also would have been very pleased if an aboriginal judge was appointed.

Wright and Lightening-Earle say the country is losing out on the opportunit­y to gain from indigenous perspectiv­es on everything from constituti­onal issues to sentencing to the factors that lead to crime.

Rowe was first named a trial judge in 1999 and has been a judge of the provincial court of appeal since 2001.

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