The Palm Beach Post

Trudeau shuffles Cabinet but keeps key roles intact in reset

His polling lead has vanished ahead of election in late 2019.

- By Josh Wingrove Bloomberg News

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is resetting after a rocky year dented his chances of re-election.

He shuffled his Cabinet on Wednesday, swapping roles like trade and natural resources — amid the pur- chase and eventual resale of Kinder Morgan Inc.’s Trans Mountain oil pipeline — while leaving key posts like finance and foreign affairs unchanged, ensuring a continuity of ties with the Trump administra- tion.

It’s a summer reload after a year in which his polling lead evaporated, leaving him in a dead heat with the opposi- tion Conservati­ves ahead of an election in October 2019. Ontario, the country’s most populous province, just ush- ered in Doug Ford, a pop- ulist conservati­ve, as premier, while other provinces look set to swing right in the coming months. It will leave Trudeau battling on three fronts: with premiers; with Trump and his protection- ist trade agenda; and with an emboldened opposition in the federal Legislatur­e.

Wednesday’s shuffle is one of Trudeau’s biggest reor- ganization­s since he took power in November 2015. Jim Carr, who had been natural resources minister, will now be trade minister, while Fran- cois-Philippe Champagne, the former trade minister, is now in charge of the infrastruc- ture file. Amarjeet Sohi takes over at natural resources, and former police Chief Bill Blair is the new border minister.

Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland, who also handles U.S. trade issues, including talks to overhaul the North American Free Trade Agree- ment, remains in her role, as does Finance Minister Bill Morneau.

The past year had its share of challengin­g moments for Trudeau, including a public spat with the U.S. president, NAFTA talks that have essentiall­y stalled, an embarrassi­ng trip to India and questions about a groping allegation made 18 years ago against him.

Trudeau’s Liberals have fallen to 35.5 percent support in Canada’s multiparty system from 38.8 percent a year ago, according to an aggregator run by the Canadian Broadcasti­ng Corp. The Conservati­ves, meanwhile, have climbed to 34.9 percent from 32.6 percent, while the third-party New Democrats are sitting at 18.9 percent, up from 15 percent.

Canadian prime ministers tend to win a second term, but those support levels suggest Trudeau is in for a fight and risks losing power or being cut down to a minority in the Legislatur­e, meaning he’d need the support of other lawmakers to govern.

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