From the CBC:
“Anand to defence, Joly to
foreign affairs: Trudeau announces major cabinet shakeup”
(Gov. Gen. Mary May Simon sits
with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and members of the newly announced
cabinet following a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall, Tuesday, October 26,
2021 in Ottawa.)
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is
kicking off his third mandate with a monumental shift in his cabinet lineup
that makes significant changes to senior portfolios. Governor General Mary May
Simon oversaw the swearing-in ceremony this morning at Rideau Hall — which saw
nine new faces added to cabinet, three names dropped, some prominent shuffles
and the creation of new portfolios ahead of Parliament's return next month. The
new cabinet list adds up to 39 ministers, including Trudeau — slightly larger
than the last roster.
In one of the largest shakeups,
Oakville MP Anita Anand becomes only the second woman in Canadian
history to take on the role of Defence minister, after former prime minister
Kim Campbell in the 1990s. She inherits a tough job as the Canadian Armed
Forces continues to battle a sexual misconduct crisis. Multiple high-ranking
military officers have been moved out of their jobs while facing allegations. As
questions about his handling of that crisis continue to swirl, Harjit Sajjan
has been bumped to minister of International Development and minister
responsible for Pacific Economic Development Canada. Mélanie Joly
received a major promotion this morning, moving up from minister of Economic
Development and Official Languages to a much higher profile as Foreign Affairs
minister. She served previously as minister of Heritage but took a political
hit in her home province of Quebec when she tried to promote the government's
agreement with Netflix. She takes over from Marc Garneau, who is no longer in
cabinet. Canada is getting a new Environment and Climate Change minister just
days ahead of the United Nations climate change conference in Glasgow (COP26).
Long-time environmental activist Steven Guilbeault is taking on the role
following his previous posting as Heritage minister. The Quebec MP, who has
worked with groups such as Equiterre and Greenpeace, will have a prominent role
in cabinet as the Liberals attempt to slash greenhouse gas emissions by 40 to
45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030. His predecessor, Jonathan Wilkinson,
takes over Natural Resources. As the
country still grapples with the lingering effects of the pandemic, Jean-Yves
Duclos takes over the health ministry. He's being replaced as president of
the Treasury Board by Ottawa-area MP Mona Fortier. Patty Hajdu, who took
on the health ministry just months before the pandemic hit, becomes minister of
Indigenous Services and minister for the federal economic development agency
for Northern Ontario. Hajdu will work on the Liberals' reconciliation agenda
with Marc Miller, who slides over to Crown-Indigenous Relations. Their new appointments come amid renewed calls
for justice for residential school survivors and for the federal government to
compensate First Nations children. Ottawa has until Friday to decide whether it
will appeal a decision by the Federal Court to uphold two Canadian Human Rights
Tribunal orders requiring Ottawa to pay out billions of dollars to Indigenous
children. Former government house leader Pablo Rodríguez takes over as Heritage
minister, keeping the portfolio in the hands of a Quebec MP. Former whip Mark
Holland moves into a cabinet position, taking over Rodríguez's old job.
New portfolios A number of
portfolios have been created, broken up or renamed. After years overseeing
various Indigenous files, Carolyn Bennett moves to a new position as
minister of Mental Health and Addictions and associate minister of health. The
veteran politician was recently forced to apologize publicly to Jody
Wilson-Raybould after suggesting the Indigenous MP's expressions of concern
about residential schools and Indigenous rights were actually a ploy to secure
a generous MP's pension. Wilson-Raybould described the message as "racist
& misogynist." Former Public Safety minister Bill Blair
becomes president of the Queen's Privy Council and takes on a new role as
minister of Emergency Preparedness — a file that used to be housed under public
safety. Marco Mendicino takes over a slimmer Public Safety department.
Dominic LeBlanc stays on as minister of Intergovernmental Affairs but also
takes on the infrastructure and communities files.
Trudeau made other changes to
his team today: Ahmed Hussen becomes minister of Housing and Diversity and
Inclusion. Karina Gould becomes minister of Families, Children and
Social Development. Joyce Murray becomes the new minister of Fisheries,
Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard. Mary Ng becomes minister of
International Trade, Export Promotion, Small Business and Economic Development.
Seamus O'Regan becomes minister of Labour. Ginette Petitpas Taylor
gets a second chance in cabinet as minister of Official Languages and minister
responsible for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency. Filomena Tassi
becomes minister of Public Services and Procurement Dan Vandal stays on
as minister of Northern Affairs but also takes on responsibility for Prairies
Economic Development Canada and the Canadian Northern Economic Development
Agency.
New faces There will be
some fresh faces around the cabinet table as well. Former broadcaster
and Toronto MP Marci Ien becomes the new minister for Women, Gender
Equality and Youth. Brampton West's Kamal Khera has been named
minister of Seniors; the previous minister, Deb Schulte, was defeated in
September's election. Pascale St-Onge, elected in Brome—Missisquoi, has
been appointed minister of Sport and minister responsible for Canada Economic
Development for Quebec Regions. She previously worked as a union leader in
Quebec's cultural sector. Alberta will get a seat at the table —
Edmonton Centre MP Randy Boissonnault is the new minister of Tourism and
associate minister of finance. He was first elected in 2015 but lost his seat
in 2019, only to win it back last month by a narrow margin. He served
previously as a special adviser to the prime minister on LGBTQ2 issues. Nova
Scotia MP Sean Fraser, who was first elected in 2015, finally gets a
spot at the table as the new minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship.
Newfoundland and Labrador's Gudie Hutchings moves in as minister of
Rural Economic Development. Helena Jaczek, a former Ontario MPP and
provincial health minister, becomes the minister responsible for the Federal
Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario.
Returning ministers A few ministers are keeping their old
jobs. Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Finance Chrystia Freeland
has agreed to remain in both roles and David Lametti stays as attorney
general and minister of justice. Transport Minister Omar Alghabra
keeps his job, Marie Claude Bibeau remains at Agriculture and Agri-food,
Dianne Lebouthillier stays at National Revenue and Lawrence MacAulay
keeps Veterans Affairs. Carla Qualtrough also remains minister of
Employment, Workforce Development and Disability Inclusion. Francois
Philippe Champagne stays on as minister as Innovation, Science and
Industry. Along with Garneau, Waterloo MP Bardish Chagger and
Winnipeg Jim Carr were dropped from cabinet. "It has been an
honour and a privilege to serve my country," Garneau tweeted.
Conservative Leader Erin O'Toole was quick
to criticize the new cabinet lineup, saying it's filled with "largely
inexperienced and ideologically driven individuals." "With
inflation at a near twenty-year high, causing gasoline, grocery and housing
prices to skyrocket, and businesses suffering from major supply chain
interruptions, it is clear from today's appointments that the Trudeau
government is not serious about addressing Canada's economic challenges,"
he said in a media statement. "Today's changes to cabinet represent
just another example of the prime minister continuing to reward ministers who
have consistently demonstrated incompetence and a lack of accountability."
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said he expects Anand to usher in "immediate
change in the culture of the Canadian Armed Forces," including the
recommendations from the 2015 Deschamps review into sexual misconduct in the
forces. He also urged the two ministers in charge of Indigenous files to
not appeal the Federal Court decision and to concentrate on ending boil water
advisories on reserves.
^ I don’t know who many of these
people are, but hopefully they do a better job (especially the Immigration Minister,
Foreign Minister and Health Minister.) ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/cabinet-announcement-trudeau-1.6225121
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