The
Constitution Act, 1867, outlines that persons are to be summoned and appointed for life to the King's Privy Council by the governor general, Provincial
premiers are not commonly appointed to the Privy Council, but have been made members on special occasions, such as the
centennial of Confederation in 1967 and the
patriation of the constitution of Canada in 1982. On
Canada Day in 1992, which also marked the 125th anniversary of
Canadian Confederation, Governor General
Ramon Hnatyshyn appointed 18 prominent Canadians to the Privy Council, including the former Premier of Ontario
David Peterson, retired hockey star
Maurice Richard, and businessman
Conrad Black (who was later expelled from the Privy Council by the Governor General on the advice of Prime Minister
Stephen Harper). The use of Privy Council appointments as purely an honour was not employed again until 6 February 2006, when Harper advised the Governor General to appoint former member of Parliament
John Reynolds, along with the
new Cabinet. Harper, on 15 October 2007, also advised Governor General
Michaëlle Jean to appoint
Jim Abbott. (front row, fifth from left), at
Rideau Hall, in
Ottawa, two days after being appointed to the King's Privy Council for Canada Members of
the monarch's family have been appointed to the Privy Council: the Prince of Wales (Edward, later King
Edward VIII), appointed during the reign of his father, King
George V, on 2 August 1927;
Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, appointed during the reign of his wife, Queen
Elizabeth II, on 14 October 1957; the Prince of Wales (Charles, now King
Charles III), appointed during the reign of his mother, Queen Elizabeth II, on 18 May 2014; and
Queen Camilla, appointed during the reign of her husband, King Charles III on 26 May 2025. On occasion, non-Canadians have been appointed to the Privy Council. The first non-Canadian sworn of the council was
Billy Hughes,
Prime Minister of Australia, who was inducted on 18 February 1916, at the request of
Robert Borden—to honour a visiting head of government, but also so that Hughes could attend Cabinet meetings on wartime policy. Similarly,
Winston Churchill,
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, was inducted during a visit to Canada on 29 December 1941. Privy councillors are entitled to the style
the Honourable () or, for the prime minister, chief justice, or certain other eminent individuals,
the Right Honourable () and the
post-nominal letters PC (in ). Prior to 1967, the style
the Right Honourable was only employed in Canada by those appointed to the
Imperial Privy Council in
London, such persons usually being prime ministers, Supreme Court chief justices, certain senior members of the Canadian Cabinet, and other eminent Canadians. These appointments ended under
Lester Pearson, though the traditional style remained in use, limited to only prime ministers and chief justices. In 1992, several eminent privy councillors, most of whom were long-retired from active politics, were granted the style by the Governor General and, in 2002,
Jean Chrétien recommended that
Herb Gray, a privy councillor of long standing, be given the style
the Right Honourable upon his retirement from Parliament. ==History==