Saturday, June 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bill Morneau leaves as suddenly as he arrived

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Aug, 2020 06:52 PM
  • Bill Morneau leaves as suddenly as he arrived

William Francis Morneau leaves federal politics as suddenly as he burst onto the Ottawa scene less than five years ago.

In November 2015, the newly elected Liberal member for Toronto Centre became the first rookie MP in nearly a century to step into the high-profile and demanding role of finance minister.

He set about implementing pillars of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's economic platform, including tax cuts for the middle class, the new Canada Child Benefit and a revamped Canada Pension Plan.

Morneau brought ample experience as a business leader and volunteer to the role.

He took the reins of the family business from his father, growing human resources firm Morneau Shepell to 4,000 employees from just 200.

Morneau was also a keen supporter of the arts, and worked to help at-risk youth and ensure better access to health care and education. He also helped found a school for Somali and Sudanese girls at a United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees camp in northern Kenya.

In the rough-and-tumble world of parliamentary politics, the deliberate and thoughtful finance minister was forced to learn fast.

While still honing his political chops, he rarely seemed far from one controversy or another.

It would prompt the opposition to try to paint the wealthy former businessman as out of touch with the realities of ordinary Canadians.

Morneau's first budget projected years of big deficits despite Trudeau's 2015 election promise to keep annual shortfalls under $10 billion.

A contentious tax-reform plan released in 2017 led to an outcry from enraged business owners, doctors, tax experts and even backbenchers within his own Liberal caucus.

"I've learned from this experience that we have to be very good at communicating to Canadians what it is that we're trying to achieve," Morneau said at the time.

There were also questions that year about the minister's personal assets.

The federal ethics commissioner of the day fined Morneau $200 for failing to disclose his role as a director in a private corporation that owns a villa in France. Morneau had disclosed his ownership of the villa to Mary Dawson but, thanks to what his office called an administrative oversight, failed to mention the ownership structure itself.

Criticism intensified when word spread that he hadn't placed his Morneau Shepell holdings into a blind trust after being named to cabinet — a decision Morneau insisted was framed by Dawson's own advice.

In response to the controversy, Morneau sold off the remainder of his Morneau Shepell shares, which were worth about $21 million. He donated to charity the difference between what the shares were worth at the time of the sale and their value in 2015 when he was first elected — estimated at about $5 million — and promised to place his other assets in a blind trust.

In his final months as finance minister, Morneau oversaw massive spending to deal with economic and social fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic.

Morneau and Trudeau are both facing investigations by the new federal ethics watchdog, Mario Dion, for taking part in talks to hand WE Charity a contract to run a pandemic-related student-volunteer program.

One of Morneau's daughters works for the organization, another has spoken at its events and his wife, Nancy McCain, has donated $100,000. Morneau also revealed last month that he had repaid WE some $41,000 in expenses for trips he and his family took in 2017 to view two of its humanitarian projects in Ecuador and Kenya.

In stepping down, the 57-year-old Morneau signalled a need for a new finance minister to take up the challenge of navigating Canada's economy through the shoals of the pandemic.

"I will look forward to watching politics from the outside, and hopefully contributing in another way."

MORE National ARTICLES

Better Access For Kelowna Families To Affordable, Quality Child Care

Better Access For Kelowna Families To Affordable, Quality Child Care
Little Scholars provides 53 child care spaces: eight for children under 36 months, 35 for children aged three to five and 10 preschool spaces.

Better Access For Kelowna Families To Affordable, Quality Child Care

WATCH: Jagmeet Singh Highlighs The ‘Powerful Message The Canadians Sent For The Minority Government’

WATCH: Jagmeet Singh Highlighs The ‘Powerful Message The Canadians Sent For The Minority Government’
The NDP leader highlighted the “powerful message the Canadians sent for the minority government”.

WATCH: Jagmeet Singh Highlighs The ‘Powerful Message The Canadians Sent For The Minority Government’

Appeal Of Convicted Calgary Triple-Murderer Douglas Garland Denied

Appeal Of Convicted Calgary Triple-Murderer Douglas Garland Denied
CALGARY - Alberta's top court has dismissed an appeal filed by a man found guilty of killing a Calgary couple and their grandson.    

Appeal Of Convicted Calgary Triple-Murderer Douglas Garland Denied

Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters

Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters
OTTAWA - The federal government is giving the Alberta government a passing grade for its industrial carbon tax.    

Feds Approve Alberta's Carbon Tax On Big Industrial Emitters

Drug Deaths Down But Coroner Says Thousands Still Overdosing In B.C.

The BC Coroners Service says there were 69 suspected overdoses deaths in October, a 42 per cent decrease from those killed by illicit drugs in the same month last year.

Drug Deaths Down But Coroner Says Thousands Still Overdosing In B.C.

Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary

Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary
On the evening of Dec. 6, 1989, a gunman entered Montreal's Ecole polytechnique, killing 14 women in an anti-feminist mass slaying before taking his own life.

Parliament Reflects On Anti-Woman Violence As MPs Mark Massacre Anniversary