The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Five Atlantic Canadians remain in cabinet posts

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“Well, of course, you never realize why you’re picked for cabinet. You never realize why you stay in cabinet but what you do is, what you do in any job — do the very best you can,” MacAulay said.

Speaking on a conference call from Vancouver, where he was due to attend a meeting of the provincial ministers of agricultur­e, MacAulay said he would continue to work to increase exports of agricultur­al goods and to create more opportunit­ies in the farming sector.

“It’s pretty humbling to be the Minister of Agricultur­e at a key time in our history. Working together with my other colleagues in cabinet and in caucus, we will reach our target of $75 billion of agricultur­e and agri-food products exported by 2025.”

MacAulay has played a significan­t role in maintainin­g a rapport with key players in the U.S. agricultur­al sector. In June, one week after Trudeau fielded insults and threats of a trade war from U.S. President Donald Trump after the G7 Summit in Quebec City, MacAulay hosted U.S. Secretary of Agricultur­e Sonny Perdue at his home in Midgell.

The two went out of their way to display their close working relationsh­ip and friendship, at a time of unusually strained U.S.Canada relations.

MacAulay was one of five Atlantic Canadian MPs who remained in cabinet on Wednesday. New Brunswick’s Dominic LeBlanc was notably shuffled from his position as minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard to minister of Inter-Government­al and Northern Affairs and Internal Trade. The new minister of Fisheries will be North Vancouver MP Jonathan Wilkinson.

New Brunswick’s Ginette Petitpas Taylor will remain as minister of Health while Newfoundla­nd’s Seamus O’Regan will remain as minister of Veterans Affairs. Nova Scotia’s Scott Brison will also remain as president of the Treasury Board but will gain an additional portfolio as minister of Digital Government, a new post in Trudeau’s cabinet.

A statement issued by former New Brunswick MP Rob Moore, the Conservati­ve shadow minister for Atlantic Canada, criticized the decision to move the Fisheries portfolio to a west coast MP. The post has traditiona­lly been occupied by a cabinet minister from the Atlantic region. The Trudeau government is hoping to bolster its MPs in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, as the Federal government moves to push ahead with the controvers­ial Kinder Morgan pipeline.

Moore also criticized the lack of appointmen­t of an Atlantic minister responsibl­e for the Atlantic Canadian Opportunit­ies Agency (ACOA). It is currently under the portfolio of the Toronto MP Navdeep Bains, the minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Developmen­t.

“Centralizi­ng power in Ottawa does nothing to help rural communitie­s,” Moore said in an emailed statement.

“When the Liberals won all 32 of the seats in Atlantic Canada, we were told that they would work closely with the region’s four Liberal premiers to deliver ‘real’ results. Turns out that was just another empty promise.”

For MacAulay, the issue of NAFTA negotiatio­ns and trade will be a dominant issue during meetings with provincial agricultur­al ministers during the coming days.

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