he then attended harvard law school, where he obtained a master of laws, common law (corporate law and indigenous law). he told the journal that his thesis was “a comparative analysis of the canadian versus the u.s. response to aboriginal issues.” he added: “i’m now in discussions with the rcmp about employment in their policy centre.”
a protester holds the flags of canada and the united states outside on parliament hill in ottawa, on saturday, feb. 1, 2025.
justin tang
/
the canadian press
what is brosseau’s professional experience?
according to the release announcing his new position, brosseau was most recently (since last december) the deputy national security and intelligence advisor to the prime minister. prior to that, he spent three months in a similar role as deputy secretary to the cabinet (emergency preparedness).
before that, brosseau spent two years as associate deputy minister of fisheries and oceans, and four before that as assistant deputy minister, safety and security, at transport canada.
from 2016 to 2019 he served as deputy commissioner of the rcmp. in 2017, he was one of several names floated as a possible replacement for commissioner bob paulson, who retired as rcmp commissioner that year. that position eventually went to dan dubeau, who served as acting commissioner until he was replaced by brenda lucki in 2018.