Vancouver Sun

MORNEAU RESIGNS

Clashed with Trudeau

- CHRISTOPHE­R NARDI

Finance Minister Bill Morneau resigned as both a cabinet minister and an MP after a week of growing public tension between himself and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau over COVID-19 pandemic economic policies.

Morneau, who has been Trudeau’s sole finance minister since his election as prime minister in 2015, made the announceme­nt during a snap press conference Monday evening.

“As we move to the next phase of the COVID-19 pandemic and pave the road for our economic recovery, we must recognize that this process will take many years. It’s the right time for a new finance minister to deliver on that plan for the long and challengin­g road ahead,” Morneau said, adding that he’d promised not to run for more than two terms.

“That’s why I’ll be stepping down as finance minister and as member of Parliament for Toronto Centre,” he continued. “I will look forward to watching politics from the outside.”

His resignatio­n came only a few hours after a head-to-head meeting with Trudeau Monday morning to address growing tensions between the two men, and less than a week after the prime minister expressed his “full confidence” in Morneau.

One senior government source who spoke on the condition of anonymity in order to speak freely said Morneau took advantage of the meeting to express his frustratio­n over how he felt he was being overruled by senior PMO advisers in policy decisions during the pandemic.

Over the past week, multiple reports said the prime minister was displeased with Morneau over how his department crafted some policies in response to the COVID-19 pandemic — such as the federal wage subsidy — as well as Morneau’s testimony at the finance committee probing the WE charity scandal.

Morneau said that Trudeau did not ask him to resign during that meeting.

During his press conference, Morneau also announced that he would be putting his name forward as the next secretary-general of the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD). In a statement, the Prime Minister’s Office said it supported that bid.

The organizati­on’s current head, Angel Gurría, announced in July that he would be stepping down at the end of his mandate, and that countries have until the end of October to put forward their candidates.

“Today, I spoke with Bill Morneau and accepted his resignatio­n,” the prime minister said in a statement. “I want to thank Bill for everything he has done to improve the quality of life of Canadians and make our country a better and fairer place to live.”

“I have counted on his leadership, advice, and close friendship over the years and I look forward to that continuing well into the future.”

Morneau’s departure now forces Trudeau to nominate a new finance minister as the government navigates a global pandemic and a record $343-billion deficit — a situation quickly denounced by opposition leaders.

“Bill Morneau’s ‘resignatio­n’ is further proof of a government in chaos. At a time when Canadians are worried about their health and their finances, Justin Trudeau’s government is so consumed by scandal that Trudeau has amputated his right hand to try and save himself,” Conservati­ve Leader Andrew Scheer wrote on social media.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said any “failures” during the pandemic are the prime minister’s fault, not the finance minister’s.

“This government is losing their finance minister at the same time as they’re about to leave millions of Canadians on the (Canada Emergency Response Benefit) without any idea of how to pay the bills in August. Canadians deserve better,” Singh said in a statement.

Tensions between Morneau and Trudeau’s offices began emerging publicly early last week when Bloomberg News revealed that the prime minister had tapped Mark Carney, the former governor of both the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, as an “informal adviser” for the pandemic economic recovery plan.

Later reports by Bloomberg, The Globe & Mail and Reuters said that Morneau was particular­ly irked by a perceived lack of concern with the cost of multiple COVID-19 aid packages as well as an absence of analysis before announcing new measures by PMO.

On the flip side, the PMO wanted to move faster than Finance on key COVID-19 financial aid programs and policies, such as boosting the federal wage subsidy from 10 per cent to 75 per cent or maintainin­g a freeze on employment insurance premiums, according to the reports.

Morneau and Trudeau have also recently been embroiled in controvers­y surroundin­g their government’s deal to outsource a $912 million student volunteer grant program to WE Charity. Last month, the ethics commission­er opened an investigat­ion into both their dealings on that file.

Both men and their families have close ties to the Toronto-based organizati­on. Trudeau has spoken at multiple major events for the organizati­on up until 2017.

The WE organizati­on also confirmed having paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in speaking fees to his wife, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, his mother, Margaret Trudeau, and his brother, Alexandre Trudeau.

In Morneau’s case, two of his daughters have either worked with or for the organizati­on in recent years.

Then a few weeks ago, Morneau revealed to the finance committee that he only reimbursed $41,000 in free travel offered by WE to his family in 2017 the day before the committee meeting.

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 ?? JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Bill Morneau has announced he is stepping down as Canada’s minister of Finance, after reported difference­s with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
JUSTIN TANG / THE CANADIAN PRESS Bill Morneau has announced he is stepping down as Canada’s minister of Finance, after reported difference­s with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

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