Saturday, March 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney defends paying 2 CEO appointees upwards of $577,000 a year

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Oct, 2025 10:25 AM
  • Carney defends paying 2 CEO appointees upwards of $577,000 a year

Prime Minister Mark Carney is defending his decision to pay the CEOs of two new government offices annual salaries that are higher than those of his own cabinet ministers.

Douglas Guzman, the head of a new defence procurement office, and Dawn Farrell, the head of the new Major Projects Office, will each make more than $577,000 a year — not counting performance pay.

Carney says their responsibilities are enormous and include things like making major military procurement decisions and reviewing industrial development projects worth "tens and tens of billions of dollars of economic activity."

In a social media post this week, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre criticized Carney's appointment of Guzman, who formerly worked in senior positions at the Royal Bank of Canada and Goldman Sachs.

Poilievre said Carney is expanding the bureaucracy and giving new appointees "massive taxpayer-funded paycheques."

But Carney said he needs the best people to deliver on important mandates, adding he believes their pay in the private sector was "substantially higher."

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Justin Tang

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. government announces changes to graduated drivers' licensing regime

B.C. government announces changes to graduated drivers' licensing regime
The British Columbia government is making changes to its graduated drivers licensing regime, eliminating the need for a second road test to obtain a full licence. 

B.C. government announces changes to graduated drivers' licensing regime

B.C. operation by police, regulators finds losses of $4M in assets to crypto fraud

B.C. operation by police, regulators finds losses of $4M in assets to crypto fraud
British Columbia's securities regulator says a recent two-day operation to identify victims of a specific type of cryptocurrency fraud has found 89 people who were drained of more than $4 million in assets.

B.C. operation by police, regulators finds losses of $4M in assets to crypto fraud

Party leaders face off in English for second federal leaders' debate

Party leaders face off in English for second federal leaders' debate
The leaders of Canada's four main political parties will square off for a second and final leaders' debate tonight in Montreal, after an initial French-language faceoff on Wednesday.

Party leaders face off in English for second federal leaders' debate

Draft budget plan proposes deep cuts across federal health programs

Draft budget plan proposes deep cuts across federal health programs
Though it's preliminary, the document gives an indication of the Trump administration’s priorities as it prepares its 2026 fiscal year budget proposal to Congress. The document indicates plans to deepen job and funding reductions across much of the federal government.

Draft budget plan proposes deep cuts across federal health programs

Woman, two young children missing after trying to cross border into Canada: RCMP

Woman, two young children missing after trying to cross border into Canada: RCMP
The RCMP say a woman and two young children are missing in the woods near the Quebec border with the United States after they were part of a group attempting to cross into Canada.

Woman, two young children missing after trying to cross border into Canada: RCMP

Supreme Court of Canada clarifies treatment of student loan debt under bankruptcy law

Supreme Court of Canada clarifies treatment of student loan debt under bankruptcy law
In 2013, she made a consumer proposal under the Bankruptcy and Insolvency Act, an alternative to bankruptcy that allows for payment of a portion of money owed, or payment over an extended perio

Supreme Court of Canada clarifies treatment of student loan debt under bankruptcy law