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Revision as of 10:49, 17 July 2021

Administrator of the Government of Canada
Administrateur du gouvernement du Canada
since January 23, 2021
Government of Canada
StyleHis Excellency
The Right Honourable
TypeViceroy
Reports toMonarch of Canada
SeatRideau Hall
AppointerCrown
on the advice of the prime minister of Canada
Term lengthUntil the office of Governor General is no longer vacant
Constituting instrumentLetters Patent, 1947
Formation1 July 1867
DeputyDeputy of the Governor General of Canada
Websitewww.gg.ca

The administrator of the Government of Canada (Template:Lang-fr) is the title used by the individual performing the duties of Governor General of Canada – the federal viceregal representative – while the office is vacant or its incumbent is otherwise unable to perform his or her duties. The office is defined in the Letters Patent, 1947, which created the office of Governor General in its present-day role. Should it be necessary to fill the position, the chief justice of Canada may act as the administrator, followed by the puisne justices in order of seniority should the chief justice not be able to assume the role. Accordingly, the role is a temporary one meant to serve only during a vacancy in the governor general's office, and is not a title that is consistently held by the chief justice at all times.

Chief Justice Richard Wagner was sworn in as administrator of Canada on January 23, 2021,[1] following the 2020–21 Rideau Hall workplace review and resignation of Governor General Julie Payette.

The administrator of Canada represents the Crown in right of the federal government. The office of administrator may also exist in a provincial context, when a lieutenant governor is unable to perform their role representing the Crown in right of a province, or the office of lieutenant governor is vacant.

Designation

The provisions to select the administrator of Canada is outlined in Article VIII of the Letters Patent, 1947, which identifies that the chief justice of Canada assumes the role as administrator should the need arise. In the absence of the chief justice, the senior puisne justice of the Supreme Court of Canada is designated as the administrator of the government. Prior to the signage of the Letters Patent, 1947, the administrator of the government was directly appointed by the monarch. An administrator of the government is not required if a governor general is absent for less than 30 days, with the governor general empowered to designate a "deputy governor general" to act on their behalf. Richard Wagner is the most recent person to be designated as the administrator of Canada.

The office is not automatically filled, as the designee must first take the oath of office.[2]

Role

The administrator of the government is empowered to exercise all of the powers of the governor general as representative of the Crown.[2] These may include:[3]

  • giving royal assent to bills passed by the legislature;
  • issuing Orders in Council and making Crown in Council (Administrator in Council) appointments;
  • dissolving Parliament for a general election;
  • calling together Parliament after a general election by way of a proclamation;
  • choosing a Prime Minister to form government and seek the confidence of the House of Commons;
  • opening each new session of Parliament by reading the Speech from the Throne;
  • providing a recommendation for all spending measures initiated by the House of Commons; and
  • appointing provincial lieutenant governors and various officers, including commissioners and diplomats.

Notable instances

Lyman Duff served as administrator on two occasions. The first was in 1931, while Duff was still a puisne justice, between the departure of the Marquess of Willingdon for England on January 16, 1931 and the arrival of the Earl of Bessborough on April 4; in this context, on March 12 of that year he became the first Canadian-born person ever to read a Speech from the Throne to open a session of Parliament.[4] After becoming chief justice in 1933, he served a second stint as administrator from February 11 to June 21, 1940, between the death of the Baron Tweedsmuir in office and the appointment of the Earl of Athlone.[4]

On February 1, 1952, King George VI approved the appointment of Vincent Massey as the next governor general. The incumbent, the Viscount Alexander of Tunis, then left Canada, with Thibaudeau Rinfret becoming administrator until Massey could be sworn in. The king died on 6 February, so it was Rinfret who proclaimed Elizabeth II as Queen of Canada. Massey was sworn in on 28 February.

Following Georges Vanier's death in office in March 1967, Robert Taschereau served as administrator for several weeks until the appointment of Roland Michener.

On June 8, 1974, Governor General Jules Léger suffered a stroke. Chief Justice Bora Laskin acted as administrator during that time for approximately six months. Laskin's tenure as administrator included:[3]

Former chief justice Beverley McLachlin became the administrator for a few weeks in July 2005 when then-governor general Adrienne Clarkson was hospitalized. During that time, McLachlin gave royal assent to the Civil Marriage Act, which legalized same-sex marriages.[2]

Richard Wagner was sworn in as administrator in January 2021 following the resignation of Julie Payette following workplace harassment allegations.

Provincial administrators

As each province has a lieutenant governor representing the provincial Crown, administrators can also be designated on a provincial level, performing all of the functions of the lieutenant governor in their absence.

If a lieutenant governor cannot act in their role, a Governor in Council appointment designates a provincial administrator. For example, the Governor in Council on the advice of the minister of Canadian heritage issued an Order in Council in 2017 that in the province of Ontario, the chief justice of Ontario and other judges of the courts of Ontario, in order of seniority, can act as the administrator of the Government of Ontario.[5][6]

In contrast to the Administrator of the Government of Canada, provincial administrators “die with the Lieutenant Governor” and cannot execute the viceregal office during a vacancy.[7]

See also

References

  1. ^ Office, Privy Council (2021-01-25). "Statement from the Privy Council Office". gcnws. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
  2. ^ a b c Silver, Janet E. (2021-01-22). "Orders-in-council and royal assents not affected by GG's resignation". iPolitics. Retrieved 2021-02-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ a b Berthelsen, Richard (2021-02-10). "The Role of the Administrator as the Crown's Representative". HillNotes. Retrieved 2021-02-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  4. ^ a b Campbell, W. Kenneth (October 1974). "The Right Honourable Sir Lyman Poore Duff, P.C., G.C.M.G.: The Man as I Knew Him". Osgoode Hall Law Journal. 12 (2). Retrieved 2016-02-24.
  5. ^ "Constitutional role". Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
  6. ^ Canada, Government of. "Orders In Council - Search". orders-in-council.canada.ca. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
  7. ^ Manual of Official Procedure of the Government of Canada (PDF). Government of Canada. p. vol 1, p. 323. The Administrator cannot act when the post of Lieutenant-Governor is vacant.