Trudeau names former Radio-Canada broadcaster Julie Miville-Dechne to the Senate - Action News
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Trudeau names former Radio-Canada broadcaster Julie Miville-Dechne to the Senate

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is appointing former journalist and public servant Julie Miville-Dechne to fill a Senate vacancy from Quebec.

PM has named 38 senators to the Red Chamber

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is appointing former journalist and public servant Julie Miville-Dechne to fill a Senate vacancy from Quebec. (Supplied by the Prime Minister's Office)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has named former journalist and public servantJulie Miville-Dechne to represent Quebec in the upper house.

Trudeau has named 38 senators to the Red Chamber.Like the other Trudeau appointees, Miville-Dechne is expected to sit as an Independent or non-affiliated senator part of the prime minister's stated campaign toeliminate partisanship from the chamber over time.

The Independent senators now constitute the largest bloc in the Senate.

Miville-Dechne spent 25 years as an award-winningnewsand public affairscorrespondent for Radio-Canada, the French-language arm of the CBC,in Washington, Toronto, Ottawaand Montreal.

In2007, she became the first woman appointed to the prestigious position of ombudsman for Radio-Canada.

In 2011, she was named chair of the Quebec government's Conseil du statut de la femme, acting as an adviser to the government and contributingto numerous research reports on gender equality issues.

She alsoserved as Quebec's representative in Canada'sdelegation to UNESCO and was appointed by the Quebec government as an envoy for human rights and freedoms in 2017.

"Her experience as a journalist and a senior public servant will greatly benefit Parliament and all of Canada," the prime minister said in a statement.

Miville-Dechnewas recommended to the PM by the Independent Advisory Board for Senate Appointments a body created after Trudeau's election in 2015 with the goal of pursuinga "merit-based" appointments process.

The Independent Senators Group (ISG)has a plurality in the Senate with 46 seats, followed by 32 Conservative senators and 11Liberals. As of today, there are still eight vacancies to be filled in the 105-member body.

Two more senators Independent Ontario Sen. Anne Cools and Conservative Alberta Sen. Betty Ungerwill retire in September before Parliament is expected to return from its summer recess.

With files from the Canadian Press