Judicial appointment keeps former cabinet minister Toews in the green.
"Much of the response to former public safety minister Vic Toews‘ ascension today to the Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench will concern his suitability for the job, the apparent cronyism in appointing a long-time Conservative flag bearer, or a combination of both.
But one angle likely to be glossed over: how the new job will allow Toews to continue to meet onerous court-ordered support payments to his ex-w...ife.
When Toews left cabinet last summer, he walked away from a salary that accounted for most of the $262,861 in gross income that, according to court records, he reported in 2010.
For most politicians approaching retirement age, the sudden loss of a six-figure salary isn’t usually much of a concern, padded as their exits typically are by the lush MP’s pension plan.
Indeed, Toews also stood to benefit from a Manitoba government pension from his days as a provincial politician and, before that, a Crown prosecutor.
Toews, however, had signed an agreement before his resignation that required him to pay a hefty amount each month to his former wife, Lorraine Fehr."
"Much of the response to former public safety minister Vic Toews‘ ascension today to the Manitoba Court of Queen’s Bench will concern his suitability for the job, the apparent cronyism in appointing a long-time Conservative flag bearer, or a combination of both.
But one angle likely to be glossed over: how the new job will allow Toews to continue to meet onerous court-ordered support payments to his ex-w...ife.
When Toews left cabinet last summer, he walked away from a salary that accounted for most of the $262,861 in gross income that, according to court records, he reported in 2010.
For most politicians approaching retirement age, the sudden loss of a six-figure salary isn’t usually much of a concern, padded as their exits typically are by the lush MP’s pension plan.
Indeed, Toews also stood to benefit from a Manitoba government pension from his days as a provincial politician and, before that, a Crown prosecutor.
Toews, however, had signed an agreement before his resignation that required him to pay a hefty amount each month to his former wife, Lorraine Fehr."
Read more: http://blogs.ottawacitizen.com/2014/03/07/judicial-appointment-keeps-former-cabinet-minister-toews-in-the-green/
The appointment, made by Justice Minister Peter MacKay, drew mixed reactions. Law dean Lorna Turnbull of the University of Manitoba said Mr. Toews was a respected justice minister and had a distinguished career that included teaching at law at the school. But DeLloyd Guth, a legal historian at that school, said the appointment violated a convention that politicians not be named to the bench within two years of leaving government.
“The gall of this is just unspeakable,” he said. As for appointment to the Supreme Court when Justice Marshall Rothstein of Manitoba reaches retirement age on Christmas Day, 2015, he said, “I certainly see that coming.”
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