Thursday, December 18, 2025
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

With U.S. pressure, concern emerging about fate of online streaming, news bills

With U.S. pressure, concern emerging about fate of online streaming, news bills
Kevin Desjardins, president of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters, which has supported both pieces of legislation, said his group is concerned when it hears the threats.

With U.S. pressure, concern emerging about fate of online streaming, news bills

Air Canada ramping up operations to near full schedule

Air Canada ramping up operations to near full schedule
The airline says in a Friday morning update that it expects 98 per cent of Canadian flights and 99 per cent of U.S. and International flights to go ahead in the next 24 hours.

Air Canada ramping up operations to near full schedule

Vancouver Island wildfire downgraded again, no longer a fire of note

Vancouver Island wildfire downgraded again, no longer a fire of note
The BC Wildfire Service says the Mount Underwood fire lost fire-of-note status, meaning it's no longer "especially visible" or posing a threat to public safety, after it was doused by 40 millimetres of rain over the past week.

Vancouver Island wildfire downgraded again, no longer a fire of note

Carney says he will travel to Germany next week to deepen ties

Carney says he will travel to Germany next week to deepen ties
Carney says Canada has a good partnership with Germany but he believes it can be better.

Carney says he will travel to Germany next week to deepen ties

Canada joins call to protect Gaza journalists, allow foreign media

Canada joins call to protect Gaza journalists, allow foreign media
Canada co-founded the Media Freedom Coalition in 2020 and has signed dozens of statements on issues in Hong Kong, Sudan and previously the West Bank.

Canada joins call to protect Gaza journalists, allow foreign media

Supporters rally around B.C. ostrich farm after appeal court upholds cull order

Supporters rally around B.C. ostrich farm after appeal court upholds cull order
Posts on a social media group administered by Universal Ostrich Farm's spokeswoman show people saying they are booking flights or are driving to the property in Edgewood in the B.C. southern Interior.

Supporters rally around B.C. ostrich farm after appeal court upholds cull order