On May 12, 2006, McLellan was appointed Distinguished Scholar in Residence to the
University of Alberta at the Canadian university's Institute for United States Policy Studies. On June 27, 2006, she also became counsel to the Edmonton-based law firm
Bennett Jones LLP. She also became a director on the boards of
Nexen Inc.,
Agrium Inc. and
Cameco Corporation. On July 1, 2009, McLellan was appointed an officer of the
Order of Canada for her service as a politician and law professor, and for her contributions as a community volunteer. On May 9, 2013, she was appointed to the
Alberta Order of Excellence for her achievements in politics, law and advanced education. In 2015, she was appointed
Chancellor of
Dalhousie University. On November 28, 2017,
Pearson College UWC named her the chair of its board of directors. On October 29, 2019, following the
2019 Canadian federal election, in which the
Liberal Party did not win any seats in Alberta and
Saskatchewan, the
Prime Minister's Office announced that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau had hired McLellan as an adviser. The Office said McLellan would assist the prime minister as he formed a government against the backdrop of a growing sentiment of
western alienation. In the
2025 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election, she endorsed
Mark Carney.
Policy report writer In 2016, McLellan was appointed as the chair of the Task Force on Marijuana Legalization and Regulation, created to provide recommendations on the design of a new system to legalize, strictly regulate and restrict recreational use of marijuana, despite her position within
Bennett Jones. The process included an opportunity for the public to provide their own input. On December 13, 2016, the panel's report was released to the news media; its recommendations were not binding on the legislators. On March 18, 2019, in the context of the
SNC-Lavalin affair Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau, announced that McLellan would serve as a special advisor on whether a single minister should continue to hold the positions of
Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada. She was also asked to analyze the operating policies and practices across the Cabinet, and the role of public servants and political staff in their interactions with the minister of justice and attorney general of Canada. She was asked to provide independent recommendations (sic) to the Prime Minister by June 30, 2019. On July 23, 2020 it was announced by
Nova Scotia justice minister
Mark Furey and federal minister of public safety and emergency preparedness
Bill Blair that McLellan would serve on a 3-person Independent Review Panel concerning the
RCMP response to
the mass shooting that occurred in Nova Scotia on April 18/19, 2020. Families of the 22 victims killed during the shooting reacted to the announcement with disappointment, as they had been calling for a full public inquiry. == Notes ==