Clerk of the Privy Council (Canada) explained

Post:Clerk
Body:the Privy Council
Secretary to the Cabinet
Insignia:Government of Canada signature.svg
Insigniasize:200px
Incumbent:John Hannaford
Incumbentsince:June 24, 2023
Type:Deputy minister
Department:Privy Council Office
Member Of:Public Service of Canada
Reports To:Prime Minister of Canada
Appointer:Governor in Council
Appointer Qualified:On the advice of the prime minister
Inaugural:William Henry Lee
Website:Privy Council webpage
Acting:N

The clerk of the Privy Council is the professional head of the Public Service of Canada. As the deputy minister for the Privy Council Office (the prime minister's department), the clerk is the senior civil servant in the Government of Canada and serves as the secretary to the Cabinet .

The role of the clerk is nonpartisan; clerks may serve multiple prime ministers and do not belong to any political party. As the secretary to the Cabinet, the role provides impartial advice to the ministry and oversees the advice and policy support given to Cabinet and its committees. As head of the public service,[1] the clerk is responsible for other deputy ministers and the provision of non-partisan, expert advice to the government as a whole.

The clerk is a Governor-in-Council appointment made on the advice of the prime minister. On May 30, 2023, Prime Minister Trudeau announced that Janice Charette would retire on June 24, 2023, and that he would appoint John Hannaford to fill the position.[2]

In the provinces and territories, the equivalent position of senior public servant is called the cabinet secretary or clerk of the executive council (in French, French: secrétaire du conseil exécutif or French: greffier du conseil exécutif, respectively).

History

The Privy Council for Canada was created and authorized by the Constitution Act, 1867, and there has been a clerk of the Privy Council since then.

The staff of the Privy Council increased from 142 to 352 between 1971 and 1975.[3]

In 1989, reforms initiated by Prime Minister Brian Mulroney gave the clerk position its present day responsibilities. Expert Donald Savoie describes these as a combination of three roles: "the secretary of cabinet, the head of the non-partisan public service, and the deputy minister — or top bureaucrat — to the prime minister." One critique of this arrangement is that it could put senior nonpartisan officials in the position of taking partisan positions.[4] Clerks generally have extensive previous experience in the Public Service of Canada before being appointed.

List of clerks of the Privy Council[5] !No.!Clerk!Term!Notes
1William Henry Lee1867–1872
2William Alfred Himsworth1872–1880
3Joseph Olivier Côté1880–1882
4John Joseph McGee1882–1907
5Rodolphe Boudreau1907–1923
6Ernest Joseph Lemaire1923–1940
7Arnold Danford Patrick Heeney1940–1949
8Norman Alexander Robertson1949–1952
9John Whitney Pickersgill1952–1953
10Robert Bryce1954–1963
11Robert Gordon Robertson1963–1975
12Peter Michael Pitfield1975–1979
13Marcel Massé1979–1980
(12)Peter Michael Pitfield1980–1982Previously held office from 1975 to 1979.
14Gordon Osbaldeston1982–1985
15Paul M. Tellier1985–1992
16Glen Shortliffe1992–1994
17Jocelyne Bourgon1994–1999
18Mel Cappe1999–2002
19Alexander Himelfarb2002–2006
20Kevin G. Lynch2006–2009
21Wayne Wouters2009–2014
22Janice Charette2014–2016
23Michael Wernick2016–2019
24Ian Shugart2019–2021
(22)Janice Charette2021–2022 – Interim Clerk from March 9, 2021, to May 28, 20222022–Jun 23, 2023Previously held office from 2014 to 2016.
25John HannafordJune 24, 2023–present

See also

References

  1. https://www.canada.ca/en/privy-council/corporate/clerk/role.html#ii Clerk of the Privy Council
  2. News: 2023-05-30 . Trudeau appoints John Hannaford as next Clerk of the Privy Council . en-CA . The Globe and Mail . 2023-05-30.
  3. http://collectionscanada.gc.ca/pam_archives/index.php?fuseaction=genitem.displayItem&lang=eng&rec_nbr=1 "Archives Search"
  4. Alex Boutiliero (March 1, 2019). Caught in the SNC-Lavalin scandal, Canada’s top civil servant should help us understand his job, expert says. Toronto Star.
  5. Web site: Privy Council Office . 2017-05-29 . Clerk and Deputy Clerk . 2021-07-05.

External links