N.B. lieutenant-governor does not need to be bilingual, says Court of Appeal
FREDERICTON — New Brunswick’s Court of Appeal says that while it is desirable for the province’s lieutenant-governor to be bilingual, the Constitution doesn’t impose such a requirement.
Residents of Canada’s only officially bilingual province have a constitutional right to receive services from and communicate with the office of the lieutenant-governor — or any other institution of the legislature or government — in either official language, the court affirmed in a ruling Thursday. But that right doesn’t depend on the “personal linguistic capabilities” of the office holder.
“It is not the right to ‘speak’ to the head of state or to the individual who personifies the institution or to otherwise communicate with him or her,” the Court of Appeal said.
Thursday’s ruling reverses a lower court ruling that said Prime Minister Justin Trudeau violated constitutional language protections when he appointed unilingual anglophone Brenda Murphy as lieutenant-governor in 2019.