Toronto

Ford defends appointing 2 former staffers to judge selection committee

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is defending his government's appointments of two former staffers to a committee that helps select provincial judges, saying he's not going to put Liberals or New Democrats in those roles.

Ontario premier says his government was elected to 'get like-minded people in appointments'

Ontario Premier Doug Ford gives remarks at the 2023 Ontario Economic Summit, in Toronto, on Nov. 1, 2023.
At a news conference Friday, Premier Doug Ford suggested that judges and justices of the peace are too lenient on criminals and are letting people out on bail too frequently, so he wants to see more judicial officials appointed who will keep people in jail. (Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press)

Ontario Premier Doug Ford is defending his government's appointments of two former staffers to a committee that helps select provincial judges, saying he's not going to put Liberals or New Democrats in those roles.

The Toronto Star first reported that Matthew Bondy, a former deputy chief of staff to Ford, is the chair of the Judicial Appointments Advisory Committee, and Brock Vandrick, Ford's former director of stakeholder relations, is on the committee.

The appointments are made by Attorney General Doug Downey, and Ford said Friday that his Progressive Conservative government got elected "to get like-minded people in appointments." 

"I'm not going to appoint some NDP or some Liberal," he said in response to a question at an unrelated news conference in Brampton.

"Doug Ford's comments are perhaps one of the most disturbing and scary things that I have heard him say," said criminal defence lawyer Michael Spratt.

"What Ford has basically said is that merit doesn't matter, qualifications don't matter," he said. "And that is deeply, deeply troubling, when you have politicians playing politics with the criminal justice system."

Ford suggested that judges and justices of the peace are too lenient on criminals, and are letting people out on bail too frequently, so he wants to see more judicial officials appointed who will keep people in jail.

"How would you like it if someone kicked your door in, put a gun to your head, and all of a sudden you find out that criminal that did that is out on the streets the next day?" he said.

"It's unacceptable. So every single appointment I can to find tough judges, tough JPs to keep guys in jail... I'm going to do it. So, that's part of democracy. You voted a party in."

Opposition reacts

The committee — made up of three judges, three lawyers and seven members of the public — reviews applications and conducts interviews for prospective Ontario Court judges, then sends a ranked list of its recommendations to the attorney general, who appoints someone from that list.

A woman behind a podium, seen in a close up shot.
Ontario Liberal leader Bonnie Crombie criticized Ford for appointing Conservative staffers to the non-partisan Judicial Appointments Advisory Committee. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Liberal Leader Bonnie Crombie called on Ford to reverse the appointments.

"Let's just be clear with what Premier Ford is saying here: He deliberately appointed former Conservative staffers to the nonpartisan committee that helps pick judicial nominees expressly to achieve desired partisan outcomes," Crombie wrote in a statement.

"These are his own words — and it is entirely unacceptable. We do not want U.S.-style politicization of our courts."

Kristyn Wong-Tam, the NDP attorney general critic, said in a written statement that the appointments raise serious concerns about the impartiality of the process of appointing judges.

"Under this government, we have seen our court system spiral into chaos," Wong-Tam wrote.

"We have seen serious cases get thrown out because of double-bookings and lack of resources, survivors forced to relive their trauma because of repeated delays. Instead of fixing the mess in our courts, the Attorney General is focused on using their majority to award partisan patronage appointments and erode people's faith in our justice system."

History of appointing connections

Green Party Leader Mike Schreiner said the government has given appointments to well-connected insiders for years. Ford sparked a huge outcry in 2018 when he named family friend Ron Taverner as Ontario Provincial Police commissioner, an appointment Taverner ultimately turned down.

Two middle-aged white men smile with an arm around each other's shoulder, posing for the camera. One is the premier of Ontario.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford was criticized for naming family friend Ron Taverner as OPP commissioner in 2018. Taverner ultimately declined the position. (Reena Foundation/Facebook)

Ford's former chief of staff Dean French resigned in 2019 shortly after media outlets reported that a relative of his and a lacrosse friend of French's son were appointed to lucrative agent-general posts in London and New York City. A niece of French's wife resigned from her appointment to the Public Accountants Council after the NDP revealed the connection. 

Jenni Byrne, a former principal secretary for Ford, was appointed to the Ontario Energy Board with an annual salary of about $197,000, and Charles Harnick, a former Tory cabinet minister, was made chair of Legal Aid Ontario.

Past Progressive Conservative party president Rueben Devlin was granted a three-year term as a health-care adviser.

Ford campaign adviser Ian Todd was appointed Ontario's trade representative to the United States, with a $350,000 salary. Failed Tory candidate Cameron Montgomery was appointed to lead a standardized testing organization.

Gavin Tighe, a Ford family lawyer, was also appointed to the Public Accountants Council. Tighe is also one of the lawyers Downey designated last year as King's Counsel, an honorary title done away with decades ago due to patronage concerns. The list also included the members of Ford's cabinet who are lawyers, Tory staffers, prominent Conservatives, and Downey himself.

With files from CBC News