Liberal government kicks off new process to choose a governor general - Action News
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Liberal government kicks off new process to choose a governor general

The federal government has unveiledits new process toselect a governor general to succeed Julie Payette, who resignedearlier this yearin the wake of a workplace review that found she presided over a "toxic" and "poisoned" workplace.

Former GG Julie Payette resigned after review found the workplace was 'toxic'

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has faced heavy criticism over his approach to choosing Julie Payette for the job of governor general. (Adrian Wyld, Fred Chartrand/The Canadian Press)

The federal government has unveiled its new process to select a governor general to succeed Julie Payette, who resigned earlier this year in the wake of a workplace review that found she presided over a "toxic" and "poisoned" workplace.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau todayannounced the creation of a new advisory board chaired by Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlancand the country's top bureaucrat, interimClerk of the Privy CouncilJanice Charette which will draw up a shortlist of candidates to take onthe vice-regal position.

"Recognizing the unique nature of the situation and understanding that the position of governor general needs to be filled on an expedited basis, the members of the advisory group have agreed to work quickly," LeBlanc said in a media statement.

"Together, the advisory group will endeavour to make the best possible recommendations to the prime minister."

Other members of the advisory board are:Daniel Jutras, the rector at theUniversit de Montral and a past member of the government's advisory board for Senate appointments; Judith LaRocque, the chair ofthe Canadian Museum of Natureand a former secretary to the governor general; Natan Obed, the president of InuitTapiriit Kanatami;andSuromitra Sanatani, the chair of Canada Post.

Trudeau said last month the vetting process going forward will be more robust. The prime minister has come in for heavycriticism over his approach to choosing Payette for the job such as his decision tonot useformer prime minister Stephen Harper's advisory committee process to suggest suitable candidates.

Opposition parties have been pushing to be part of the selection process and have suggested Trudeau got swept up in the celebrity status of Payette, a former astronaut.

CBC News reported in September that Trudeau's officefailed to check with at least two key past employersbefore appointing Payette. Those background checkscould have revealed that she was given severance of roughly $200,000 when she resigned from the Montreal Science Centre in 2016 following complaints about her treatment of employees, say multiple sources.

Payette also left the Canadian Olympic Committee in 2017 in the wake of two internal investigations into her treatment of staff, which included claims of verbal harassment, sources said.

Payette and her second-in-command,Assunta Di Lorenzo, resigned on Jan. 21 after receiving a copy of a blistering report from an outsideworkplace review. The Privy Council Office (PCO) launched a third-party review byQuintet Consulting after aCBC News story seven months agoquoteda dozen confidential sources claiming Payette belittled, berated and publicly humiliated staff. Di Lorenzo also wasaccused of bullying employees.

The workplace reviewdocumented allegations of "yelling, screaming, aggressive conduct, demeaning comments and public humiliation" that caused13 participants in the review to go on sick leave and 17 to leave the office altogether.

Payette has maintained from the beginning that she takes issues of workplace harassment very seriously.

"Everyone has a right to a healthy and safe work environment, at all times and under all circumstances," she wrote in a media statement when she resigned. "It appears this was not always the case at the Office of the Secretary to the Governor General. Tensions have arisen at Rideau Hall over the past few months and for that, I am sorry.

"We all experience things differently, but we should always strive to do better, and be attentive to one another's perceptions."

With files from Ashley Burke

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