Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police

Professional head of the agency From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (French: commissaire de la Gendarmerie royale du Canada) is the professional head of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP). The commissioner exercises control and management of the RCMP under the direction of the minister of public safety. The position is a Governor in Council appointment made on the advice of the prime minister of Canada.

Constituting instrumentRoyal Canadian Mounted Police Act
Quick facts of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Reports to ...
Commissioner of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Commissaire de la Gendarmerie royale du Canada
Rank badge (left) and slip on (right)
since March 17, 2023
Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Reports toMinister of Public Safety
AppointerGovernor in Council
on the advice of the prime minister
Term lengthAt His Majesty's pleasure
Constituting instrumentRoyal Canadian Mounted Police Act
Inaugural holderW. Osborne Smith
Formation1873
Websitewww.rcmp-grc.gc.ca
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Commissioner William Higgitt and Queen Elizabeth II, RCMP Centennial Celebrations, Regina, 1973
Commissioner Bob Paulson speaking at the opening of the 65th Glengarry Highland Games in 2012

In addition to their role in the management of the RCMP, the commissioner serves as Principal Commander of the Order of Merit of the Police Forces. Under the Firearms Act, the RCMP commissioner also serves as the commissioner of firearms, the chief executive of the Canadian Firearms Program.[1]

Michael Duheme is the 25th commissioner of the RCMP, having taken office in an interim capacity on March 17, 2023, and permanently as of the Change Command ceremony held on May 25, 2023.[2]

Queen Elizabeth II was commissioner-in-chief from 2012 to 2022, and King Charles III was honorary commissioner of the RCMP from 2012 until 2023.[3] In recognition of the RCMP's 150th anniversary and the upcoming coronation, on April 28, 2023, King Charles III consented to assume the title of the RCMP Commissioner-in-Chief.[4] However, neither appointment (commissioner-in-chief or honorary commissioner) exercises a substantive role in the operation of the organization.

List of commissioners

There have been 25 commissioners, including one acting commissioners and one interim commissioner, and excluding one unofficial acting commissioner since the founding of the North-West Mounted Police in 1873:

More information Agency, No. ...
List of commissioners
Agency No. Image Name Term start Term end Time in Office Notes
North-West Mounted Police (NWMP)

designated "Royal" in 1904 (RNWMP)

(1873–1920)

1 W. Osborne Smith September 25, 1873 October 17, 1873 22 days Acting commissioner of the NWMP
2 George Arthur French October 18, 1873 July 21, 1876 2 years, 277 days
3 James Farquharson MacLeod July 22, 1876 October 31, 1880 4 years, 101 days
4 Acheson Gosford Irvine November 1, 1880 March 31, 1886 5 years, 150 days First Canadian born man to hold the post
5 Lawrence William Herchmer April 1, 1886 July 31, 1900 14 years, 121 days Was a civilian at the time of his appointment although with an army background.
6 Aylesworth Bowen Perry August 1, 1900 March 31, 1923 22 years, 242 days Perry was the commissioner of the NWMP when King Edward VII awarded the force the title "Royal" (RNWMP) in 1904, and was still commissioner when the RNWMP merged with the Dominion Police in 1920 to form the RCMP, with Perry appointed the first commissioner of the RCMP.
Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP)

(1920–present)

7 Cortlandt Starnes April 1, 1923 July 31, 1931 8 years, 121 days
8 Sir James Howden MacBrien August 1, 1931 March 5, 1938 6 years, 216 days Only Commissioner to die in office of a heart attack. One of only two Mounties to be knighted for his WWI service with the British Army. Had some NWMP training prior to WWI but was called up as a reservist just after training in 1914.
9 Stuart Taylor Wood March 6, 1938 April 30, 1951 13 years, 55 days
10 Leonard Hanson Nicholson May 1, 1951 March 31, 1959 7 years, 334 days
11 Charles Edward Rivett-Carnac April 1, 1959 March 31, 1960 365 days
12 Clifford Walter Harvison April 1, 1960 October 31, 1963 3 years, 213 days
13 George Brinton McClellan November 1, 1963 August 14, 1967 3 years, 286 days
14 Malcolm Francis Aylesworth Lindsay August 15, 1967 September 30, 1969 2 years, 46 days RCMP Patrol Vessel Lindsay was named in his honour.
15 William Leonard Higgitt October 1, 1969 December 28, 1973 4 years, 88 days RCMP Patrol Vessel Higgitt was named in his honour.
16 Maurice Jean Nadon January 1, 1974 August 31, 1977 3 years, 242 days RCMP Patrol Vessel Nadon was named in his honour.

The present-day RCMP National Headquarters building in Ottawa was named in his honour on October 5, 2011.

17 Robert Henry Simmonds September 1, 1977 August 31, 1987 9 years, 364 days RCMP Patrol Vessel Simmonds was named in his honour.
18 Norman Inkster September 1, 1987 June 24, 1994 6 years, 296 days RCMP Patrol Vessel Inkster was named in his honour.
19 Joseph Philip Robert Murray June 25, 1994 September 1, 2000 6 years, 68 days
20 Giuliano Zaccardelli September 2, 2000 December 15, 2006 6 years, 104 days
21 Beverley Busson December 15, 2006 July 16, 2007 213 days Interim commissioner; Busson was the RCMP's first female commissioner.
22 William J. S. Elliott July 16, 2007 November 20, 2011 4 years, 127 days First civilian commissioner.
23 Bob Paulson November 21, 2011 June 30, 2017 5 years, 221 days
Dan Dubeau June 30, 2017 April 16, 2018 290 days Acting commissioner; Dubeau served in the role at the rank of deputy commissioner.
24 Brenda Lucki April 16, 2018 March 17, 2023 4 years, 335 days Lucki was the RCMP's first permanent female commissioner.
25 Michael Duheme March 17, 2023 Incumbent 2 years, 359 days
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References

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