Go commenced her formal legal career at
Women's Legal Education and Action Fund (LEAF) as a legal researcher. Go worked at
Legal Aid Ontario's legal clinic system as a staff lawyer in Toronto, initially at the East Toronto Community Legal Services and
Parkdale Community Legal Services.
Advocacy for immigrants and racialized community In 1992, Go began work as the clinic director of the Metro Toronto Chinese & Southeast Asian Legal Clinic, a clinic focusing on servicing low-income non-English speakers in the
Chinese,
Vietnamese,
Cambodian, and
Laotian communities in the
Greater Toronto Area. Go has been cited in the Canadian press for comments on legal issues relating to systemic racism and the racialization of poverty, especially regarding the Chinese Canadian community. In 2007, she co-founded the Colour of Poverty Campaign, a campaign to address the increasing racialization of poverty in Ontario and currently serves as a member of its steering committee. She continued in the organization, and was a member of the steering committee in 2017. In 2017, Go appeared before a Canadian Senate hearing to discuss the impact of high fees on immigration for the communities she served in her role at Metro Toronto Chinese & Southeast Asian Legal Clinic. Go was involved in a case involving a Chinese couple who had their rights as parents challenged because their DNA did not match the DNA of their child. In 2013, Go described herself as a “loudmouth activist for politicians to contend with.” Go was elected as a
Bencher of Law Society of Upper Canada in 2001, 2006, and 2013.
Campaign for Chinese head tax reparations Go played a significant role in Canada’s redress for
Chinese Head Tax and the
Chinese Immigration Act of 1923, which resulted in a formal apology by the government of Canada in 2006., on behalf of
Chinese head tax payers and their descendants against the Government of Canada. After losing an appeal in this case, Go and CCNC accused an appeal judge of racism, alleging he made inappropriate comments to counsel during the course of argument on an appeal. Remarking on the case,
The Globe and Mail noted it is extremely rare for lawyers to attribute improper motives to judges. On June 22, 2006,
Prime Minister Stephen Harper made an official apology in the
House of Commons on behalf of Canada for the Chinese head tax, and announced the payment of
reparations for survivors and their spouses. == Judiciary ==