The Attorney General of Ontario is the chief legal adviser to His Majesty the King in Right of Ontario and, by extension, the Government of Ontario. The attorney general is a senior member of the Executive Council of Ontario, and oversees the Ministry of the Attorney General, which is the department responsible for the oversight of the justice system in the province of Ontario.
The attorney general is an elected Member of Provincial Parliament who is appointed by the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario on the constitutional advice of the Premier of Ontario. Doug Downey was appointed attorney general of Ontario on 20 June 2019, replacing Caroline Mulroney. Most holders of the office have been practising lawyers, with the exception of Mulroney and Marion Boyd.
The attorney general has the authority to represent the provincial government in court personally, but this task is often delegated to crown attorneys, or to crown counsel in civil cases. Previous Attorneys General Ian Scott and Roy McMurtry were both courtroom lawyers before entering politics, and later acted for Ontario in constitutional appeals before the Supreme Court of Canada.
The Ministry of the Attorney General delivers and administers a wide range of justice services, including:
The Ontario Crown Attorney's Office, the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee, the Office of the Children's Lawyer (formerly called the Official Guardian), and the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) all fall within the Ministry's responsibilities. The Ministry also partially funds Legal Aid Ontario, which is administered by an independent board and also receives funding through the Law Foundation of Ontario and from the federal government.
In 2008, the Office of the Independent Police Review Director (IPRD), now the Law Enforcement Complaints Agency, was established under the authority of the Attorney General, as a civilian body with powers invested through Public Inquiries Act to investigate complaints about municipal police forces and the Ontario Provincial Police.
Following the 2013 release of former Supreme Court judge Frank Iacobucci's report on the relationship between Aboriginal peoples and the Ontario justice system, a position of deputy attorney general with responsibility for Aboriginal issues was created.
1. John White (Frontenac County) 1791âÂÂ1800<br> 2. Robert Isaac Dey Gray 1800âÂÂ1801<br> 3. Thomas Scott 1801âÂÂ1806<br> 4. William Firth 1807âÂÂ1812<br> 5. G. D'Arcy Boulton 1814âÂÂ1818<br> 6. Sir John Robinson, 1st Baronet, of Toronto 1818âÂÂ1829, acting AG 1812âÂÂ1814<br> 7. Henry John Boulton 1829âÂÂ1833<br> 8. Robert Sympson Jameson 1833âÂÂ1837, last British-appointed AG<br> 9. Christopher Alexander Hagerman 1837âÂÂ1840, first Canadian-born AG of Upper Canada<br> 10. William Henry Draper 1840âÂÂ1841, last AG of Upper Canada
In 1841, the Province of Upper Canada became the District of Canada West in the Province of Canada
11. William Henry Draper 1841âÂÂ1843<br> 12. Robert Baldwin 1843âÂÂ1848<br> 13. William Buell Richards 1848âÂÂ1854<br> 14. John A. Macdonald 1854âÂÂ1862, 1864âÂÂ1867<br> 15. John Sandfield Macdonald 1862âÂÂ1864
After 1867, the attorney general position was split into federal and provincial counterparts:
Attorney General of Ontario<br>Attorney General of Quebec (renamed the Ministry of Justice in 1965)<br>Attorney General of Canada