Lethbridge Herald

PM adds facesto cabinet

Pre-election cabinet shuffle eyes border, trade and bruising provincial relations

- Andy Blatchford THE CANADIAN PRESS — OTTAWA

Justin Trudeau has unveiled his pre-election cabinet in a shuffle designed to showcase new faces and to address increasing­ly troublesom­e files — from border security, to trade promotion, to the potential for bare-knuckle scraps with the provinces.

In Wednesday’s shuffle, the prime minister gave new portfolios to six ministers and expanded his cabinet by promoting five other MPs to his front benches. The shakeup will boost the profiles of more members of Trudeau’s team, which has long relied on his personal brand, ahead of next year’s federal election.

The moves also look to reinforce possible weak spots.

In one key change, Trudeau confidant and long-time MP Dominic LeBlanc moved from fisheries to intergover­nmental affairs, elevating him into a higherprof­ile role that’s destined to become particular­ly turbulent.

As a result, Canadians should expect to see a lot more of LeBlanc. At the helm of the unpredicta­ble provincial relations file, the sometimes-pugnacious politician will have more bureaucrat­ic powers at his fingertips with support from several department­s.

The federal-provincial dynamic is set to become more confrontat­ional for Trudeau’s Liberals following the recent election of Ontario’s Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government led by Premier Doug Ford. Over the coming months, there’s potential for more conflicts if Quebec and Alberta elect right-leaning government­s of their own.

The new cabinet lineup has also been crafted to handle Canada’s complicate­d relationsh­ip with the United States. Following the election of U.S. President Donald Trump, Ottawa has faced growing challenges related to irregular border crossers and big unknowns surroundin­g Canada-U.S. trade, including an escalating tariff dispute and the difficult renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement.

“I think there’s no question that the internatio­nal context is constantly changing,” Trudeau said Wednesday after announcing his new cabinet at Rideau Hall.

“There is certainly a level of clarity for Canadians, for businesses, for everyone across this country that we need to diversify our markets, we need to ensure that we are not as dependent on the United States.”

To expand Canada’s trade interests beyond the U.S., Trudeau moved natural resources minister Jim Carr into the internatio­nal trade portfolio. Carr’s job will be to re-energize stalled efforts towards a trade deal with China, to promote the CanadaEU free trade agreement among European countries that have yet to ratify it and to continue to push for deeper economic integratio­n into Latin America.

The shuffle will also raise the profiles of five Liberal MPs entering cabinet for the first time.

The newcomers include Bill Blair, named minister of the new portfolio of border security and organized crime reduction.

The former Toronto police chief will be responsibl­e for the thorny political issues of border management and a surge of migrants at unofficial entry points, as well as gun violence and the complex process of cannabis legalizati­on.

Other new ministers include Mary Ng, who oversees small business and export promotion. The Toronto-area MP was an adviser to Trudeau before her byelection win last year.

Filomena Tassi, a Hamilton MP and former high-school chaplain, assumes the new cabinet file dedicated to the needs of seniors.

Jonathan Wilkinson, a North Vancouver MP, is taking over from LeBlanc as minister of fisheries, oceans and the Coast Guard. The Rhodes Scholar served as parliament­ary secretary to Environmen­t Minister Catherine McKenna.

Mandate letters for the new ministers are expected later this summer.

In Quebec, veteran MP Pablo Rodriguez will succeed Melanie Joly, a fellow Montrealer, as heritage minister. The move will position Rodriguez as a key minister responsibl­e for selling the Liberals to Quebec, a critical electoral battlegrou­nd for the party.

Joly, who struggled at times in her role as heritage minister, was shunted to tourism, official languages and la Francophon­ie.

Trudeau put the controvers­ial pipeline file in the hands of Amarjeet Sohi, who represents an Edmonton riding. Sohi, who will take over Carr’s natural resources portfolio, handed off his infrastruc­ture file to Francois Philippe Champagne, the former internatio­nal trade minister.

The responsibi­lities of five existing ministers were also revamped. Many cabinet members with key roles stayed put, including McKenna, Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland, Finance Minister Bill Morneau, Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains and Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

Conservati­ve deputy leader Lisa Raitt said Trudeau’s shuffle highlights areas where the government has failed to deliver on its promises.

“They’re failing in trade, they’re failing in pipelines, they’re failing in infrastruc­ture and as a result those ministers have been moved to other portfolios — this is desperate attempt to hit that reset button,” Raitt said.

“If Justin Trudeau had thought the last two-and-a-half years had gone well, he wouldn’t be making these kinds of changes.”

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