- Roy McMurtry
Roland "Roy" McMurtry (born
May 31 ,1932 ) is ajudge and formerpolitician inOntario ,Canada and the current Chancellor ofYork University .Early life
McMurtry was born in
Toronto and educated atUpper Canada College and then St. Andrew's College, graduating in 1950. He received aBachelor of Arts degree from theUniversity of Toronto , Trinity College in 1954, and aBachelor of Laws degree fromOsgoode Hall Law School in 1958. While attending university, he was admitted to theZeta Psi fraternity and became a close friend of futurePremier of Ontario William Davis, hisCanadian football teammate. He was a trial lawyer for seventeen years before entering politics.Political career
In the 1960s, he worked with
Dalton Camp andNorman Atkins to removeJohn Diefenbaker as leader of theProgressive Conservative Party of Canada .McMurtry suffered a back injury during the 1971 Ontario Progressive Conservative leadership convention, and was able to exempt himself from choosing between Davis and rival candidate
Allan Lawrence , whose campaign was managed by Atkins. Davis defeated Lawrence by 44 votes on the final ballot. A few weeks later, McMurtry organized a meeting which brought together the Davis and Lawrence leadership teams. The resulting alliance, known as theBig Blue Machine , dominated the Progressive Conservative Party into the 1980s.Allan Lawrence resigned his St. George constituency in late 1972 to move to federal politics, and McMurtry was recruited by Davis as the Progressive Conservative candidate for a March 1973
by-election . He was unexpectedly defeated by Liberal Party candidateMargaret Campbell , a well-known municipal politician. He was first elected to theLegislative Assembly of Ontario two years later, in the 1975 provincial election, defeating Liberal candidate Frank Judge in the Eglinton electoral district.Davis won a
minority government in the 1975 election, and McMurtry was immediately appointed to cabinet as Attorney-General. He held this position until 1985, and also served as Solicitor-General from 1978 to 1982.McMurtry was a
Red Tory ,Erin Anderssen, "Doing Canada justice," "The Globe and Mail ", December 13, 2003, pg. F.5.] and was one of Davis's closest advisers in government. As Attorney-General, he played a major role in brokering the deal that achievedpatriation of theCanadian Constitution and the creation of theCharter of Rights and Freedoms . A late night "kitchen accord" between McMurtry,Jean Chrétien andRoy Romanow in November 1981 played a significant role in ending the federal-provincial constitutional deadlock, and allowed the Constitution come into law the following year.When Davis resigned as Progressive Conservative leader and premier in 1985, McMurtry sought the party's leadership at the party's January 1985 leadership convention. He started as the underdog in the campaign, but impressed many delegated through his performance in candidates' debates and polling data showing him as the preferred choice of Ontario voters. During the contest, McMurtry was sometimes criticized for remaining too long in one portfolio. While his opponents all had diverse ministerial experience, McMurtry's expertise was focused more narrowly on matters of legal jurisprudence. His supporters included
Robert Elgie ,Frank Drea ,Reuben Baetz andBob MacQuarrie .McMurtry won a total of 300 votes on the first ballot, considerably more than he had been expected to win. It was not sufficient, however, to place better than fourth in a field of four, after Frank Miller,
Dennis Timbrell andLarry Grossman . He was eliminated from the contest and gave his support to Grossman, a fellow Red Tory.McMurtry's support was enough to move Grossman into second place on the second ballot, ahead of the more centrist Timbrell. Timbrell's delegates were divided on the last ballot, which allowed the conservative Miller to win the convention. Miller gave McMurtry the option of remaining as Attorney-General in the new government, but he declined and announced his retirement from politics.
On
February 4 , Canadian External Affairs Minister Joe Clark announced that McMurtry had been appointed to succeedDonald Jamieson as Canada's High Commissioner toGreat Britain . He served in this capacity until 1988.Law career
Upon his return to Canada, he resumed his law practice and became chairman and Chief Executive Officer of the
Canadian Football League .He was appointed Associate Chief Justice of the Superior Court (Trial Division) in Ontario in 1991, and became
Chief Justice of that court in 1994. He became Chief Justice of Ontario in 1996, heading the entire court system in the province, and leading theOntario Court of Appeal . That court gained a degree of public attention in 2003 when it ruled in "Halpern v. Canada (Attorney General) " that provisions of theCanadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms guaranteeing equality under the law require the Province of Ontario to issue marriage licences to same-sex couples. For this, the "Globe and Mail " named McMurtry and his fellow judges the "Nation Builders of 2003."In the weeks prior to his retirement, McMurty was widely praised as being a unifying force and consensus-builder during his tenure as Chief Justice.
"Under Chief Justice McMurtry's leadership, we pulled together and we worked hard, and the chief justice reached out to the bar and he sought their support, and he got it," said Court of Appeal Judge Michael Moldaver in a speech. "Thanks to his courage, leadership and vision, we now have an appeal process that is capable of delivering quality justice in a timely and efficient manner."
"I don't want to paint him as the Next Coming, but he has been a great uniter," said Clifford Lax, a veteran Toronto civil litigator. "He is a really very nice person who is able to find common ground. In a quiet, unassuming way, he has won a lot of converts to what he has done."
During his term McMurtry also acted as the
Mayor of Toronto 's race relations commissioner, and helped create Pro Bono Access Ontario which helps provide free legal services to the poor and encourages lawyers to providepro bono services. He has also been involved with the Ontario Justice Education Network, a program which educates youth at risk about the justice system.McMurtry is credited with helping transform a backlogged and sometimes fractious court into a highly efficient, harmonious body.
Personal life
Roy McMurtry is married to Ria Jean Macrae with whom he has six children. His eldest son, Jim McMurtry ran as a Liberal in
British Columbia in the 2006 federal election, placing second to ConservativeRuss Hiebert .Roy McMurtry is a landscape painter and has donated pieces to charity auctions.
Honours
In 2007, he was awarded the
Order of Ontario . [cite web|title=Order of Ontario Recipients Announced|url=http://www.citizenship.gov.on.ca/english/news/2007/n20071219.shtml]Controversy
One of McMurtry's lowest points was his role in the prosecution of nurse
Susan Nelles , who was charged with the murder of a number of infants at theHospital for Sick Children in Toronto. The charges were dropped following a preliminary hearing and Nelles was exonerated by theGrange Commission , aroyal commission called upon to examine the deaths. McMurtry was criticized for his ministry's role in her wrongful prosecution. In a 2007 interview, McMurtry, looking back at the incident, said "I can remember that I had been away with my family on a school break, when I came back and saw the headlines, I brought in my deputy attorney-general, and said: 'What the hell is going on here? You've had a nurse arrested at one of the world's most famous hospitals?' " McMurtry said that local prosecutors failed to consult with the ministry before consenting to the charges and that examining the case McMurty had doubts that that Nelles had exclusive access to all of the children.Kirk Makin, "The regrets of a consensus-building chief justice Retiring Roy McMurtry muses about bathhouse, baby death and abortion cases", "The Globe and Mail", April 4, 2007 [http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070404.MCMURTRY04/TPStory/?query=mcmurtry] ]He was also Attorney-General at the time of the
1981 Toronto bathhouse raids which were widely denounced as one of the most socially regressive acts in the province's history. At the time it was widely believed that the raids were approved by McMurtry however, in a 2007 interview, McMurtry said that this was not the case, "The irony of the whole thing was that I had expressed my concern to the chief of police; that it really looked like we were dissolving into a police state. The whole thing looked terrible. Without a doubt, that was one of my most frustrating experiences," said McMurtyReferences
External links
* [http://www.osgoodehall.com/mcmurtry2.html McMurtry Art Exhibit] Online exhibition of Roy McMurtry's paintings.
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