Beverley McLachlin is stepping down as Supreme Court chief justice in mid-December.
McLachlin is the first woman to hold the top job on the high court, and she is also Canada’s longest-serving chief justice.
FULL COVERAGE: Supreme Court of Canada

Get daily National news
She was sworn in as a justice of the Supreme Court in 1989, and was appointed chief justice 11 years later.
Federally appointed judges can sit until age 75, and McLachlin’s mandatory retirement date is Sept. 7, 2018.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau congratulated McLachlin on her coming retirement, saying her judicial accomplishments are unparalleled in Canadian history.
Trudeau says she has been a judicial leader and trailblazer for almost four decades, and that Canadians owe her an immense debt.
- On the Brink: Ontario mom ‘one bill away from paying to go back to work’
- Canada has the critical minerals Donald Trump wants. So what should we do with them?
- ‘You, sir, are not a change’: Party leaders target Carney in final election debate
- Poilievre promises to end ban on single-use plastic straws, other items
Comments