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Commissioners of Yukon

Commissioner of Yukon
Commissaire du Yukon
Badge of the Commissioner of Yukon.svg
Badge of the Commissioner of Yukon
Flag of the Commissioner of Yukon.svg
Flag of the Commissioner of Yukon
Incumbent
Doug Phillips

since 1 December 2010
Inaugural holder James Morrow Walsh
Formation August 17, 1897

This is a list of Yukon Commissioners from 1897 to the present. The commissioner is appointed by the Government of Canada, but a commissioner, in contrast to the Governor-General of Canada or the Lieutenants-Governor of the Canadian provinces, is not a viceroy and therefore commissioners are not direct representatives of the monarch in the territory.

The offices of Commissioner and Administrator were abolished in 1918. Office replaced by the Gold Commissioner who was responsible to the federal Minister of the Interior.

The positions of Gold Commissioner and Comptroller were combined in 1932 with the Comptroller being the title for the chief executive. The title was changed to "Controller" in 1936.

In 1948, the title of chief executive once again became Commissioner. By the 1960s, the Commissioner had formed an executive committee that included some members of the elected Territorial Council, in essence a cabinet. (By the mid 1970s, the Territorial Council was referring to itself as a Legislative Assembly, and its members MLAs rather than Councillors.) Beginning in 1978, Yukon had party government with a Government Leader.

In October 1979, federal minister Jake Epp (Indian Affairs and Northern Development) issued a letter, often known as the Epp letter, instructing the Commissioner to assume a role similar to that of a provincial Lieutenant-Governor, and devolving leadership of the day-to-day government to the majority leader of the legislative assembly (territorial council), to whom the Epp letter granted the authority to use the title Premier. At that time, the government leader added a fifth elected member to the committee, which became an executive council.

Subsequent federal ministers did not revoke this authority and instruction, which was eventually codified in amendments to the Yukon Act, along with redesignation of the legislative assembly from territorial council. The process, particularly since 1979, has devolved powers from the federal government to the territorial government, bringing authority which is normally reserved by the Articles of Confederation for provinces to the territory.


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