Friday, January 16, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney says Freeland's resignation is 'consistent' with taking Ukraine adviser role

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2026 09:43 AM
  • Carney says Freeland's resignation is 'consistent' with taking Ukraine adviser role

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Ontario Liberal MP Chrystia Freeland's upcoming resignation from the House of Commons is "consistent" with taking a role as an unpaid economic development adviser for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. 

On Monday Freeland announced her immediate resignation as Carney's special representative on the reconstruction of Ukraine and eventual resignation as a member of Parliament.

"My judgment was that taking that role would be consistent with resigning as an MP, and I welcomed her doing that," Carney said during a press conference Tuesday at the Canadian Embassy in Paris.

Carney said he did not ask Freeland to stay on as a MP, when he was asked about that prospect given the Liberals hold a minority government.

Carney is in Paris to meet with Ukrainian allies, including the U.S., to discuss security guarantees for the war-torn nation as part of a potential peace deal with Russia being negotiated by the United States. 

"Nothing's assured, but there's real momentum in this peace process. And the security guarantees are incredibly important, but as is the reconstruction and the prosperity plan, and she'll be there to work on that," Carney said.

Freeland has previously said she would not run in the next election. 

The outgoing MP will become CEO of the Rhodes Trust, a global educational charity in Oxford, England, starting on July 1. 

Opposition MPs, including Conservative foreign affairs critic Michael Chong and interim NDP leader Don Davies, said Freeland should have resigned as a MP before taking a job with another nation's leader. 

A byelection will be called in Freeland's University--Rosedale after she officially leaves the seat.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP
Ontario Provincial Police say a British Columbia man has been arrested in a historic sexual assault investigation spanning nearly three decades and involving four alleged victims, three of whom were teens at the time.

B.C. man, 52, arrested in 1997 Ontario sexual assault investigation: OPP

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment
Former Conservative senator Don Meredith was found not guilty on all counts in an Ottawa courtroom this morning.

Former senator Don Meredith found not guilty of sexual assault, criminal harassment

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president
Prime Minister Mark Carney and U.S. President Donald Trump pointed and smiled at one another as they sat down to dinner together in South Korea on Wednesday - their first in-person interaction since Trump abruptly ended trade talks last week.

Carney, Trump attend dinner hosted by South Korean president

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures
A former deputy premier of Alberta says the success of a petition he circulated to make it official policy for the province to stay in Canada should signal to Premier Danielle Smith that she needs to put separatism to bed.

'Forever Canadian' petition surpasses goal, collects 456K signatures

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting
British Columbia Attorney General Niki Sharma says the provincial government's argument in the landmark Cowichan Tribes land case was that Aboriginal and fee-simple title "cannot co-exist" on the same land in their full form.

B.C. presses its case ahead of Cowichan land meeting

Tories call on all parties to back tougher sentences for intimate partner violence

Tories call on all parties to back tougher sentences for intimate partner violence
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is calling on other parties to support legislation he says would combat intimate partner violence.

Tories call on all parties to back tougher sentences for intimate partner violence