Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney says his government starts in a moment of crisis in Canada-U.S. relations

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2025 04:54 PM
  • Carney says his government starts in a moment of crisis in Canada-U.S. relations

Mark Carney was sworn in as Canada's 24th prime minister in a ceremony at Rideau Hall on Friday morning, along with a leaner Liberal cabinet that he said is focused on "meeting the moment" and facing down the threat posed by U.S. President Donald Trump.

In his first press conference as prime minister, Carney said his government will concentrate on growing the economy, making life more affordable and making the country more secure.

"One of the top issues, of course, is the crisis with respect to the United States, and the opportunity with respect to trade diversification," he said.

He said keeping together the core team of ministers who have been dealing with Trump's tariff threats was very important.

François-Philippe Champagne has been named finance minister, while Anita Anand took over his former portfolio as minister of innovation, science and industry.

Dominic LeBlanc was named minister of international trade and intergovernmental affairs and president of the King’s Privy Council.

Mélanie Joly — who was sworn in later in the day after wrapping up the G7 foreign ministers' meeting in Charlevoix, Que. — will stay on as minister of foreign affairs and take on international development.

David McGuinty held his job as public safety minister and took on the added role of emergency preparedness.

Carney said French President Emmanuel Macron has invited him to visit Paris "in the coming days" and he will also travel to London to talk about trade and security.

He said he has no immediate plans to visit Washington to meet with Trump but he looks forward to speaking with him.

"We respect the United States. We respect President Trump. President Trump has put some very important issues at the top of his agenda. We understand his agenda," Carney said.

He also said he and Trump share some experiences, including working in real estate and the private sector.

Asked about Trump's repeated threats to make Canada the 51st state, Carney was dismissive.

"It's crazy," he said. "We will never, ever, in any way, shape or form be part of the United States."

Carney met with his cabinet Friday afternoon, where he signed off on an order-in-council to end the consumer carbon price on April 1. 

He said Canadians who received a rebate in the past will get one final payment in April.

Carney had pledged during the Liberal leadership race to end the consumer carbon price — which has become deeply unpopular — while maintaining the industrial price paid by big polluters.

Carney's new government includes 20 Trudeau-era ministers along with three new faces from the Liberal caucus.

Chrystia Freeland, whose December resignation as finance minister was the catalyst for Trudeau's decision to step down, is now transport minister. She came in a very distant second to Carney in the Liberal leadership race last Sunday.

Steven Guilbeault was moved from the environment file to become minister of a renamed portfolio: Canadian culture and identity. He's also heading up Parks Canada and serving as the government's Quebec lieutenant.

Gary Anandasangaree is still minister of Crown-Indigenous relations and Northern affairs, but also took on the job of justice minister and attorney general.

Bill Blair stayed on as defence minister and Patty Hajdu remains minister of Indigenous services. Kamal Khera moved to health, Steven MacKinnon is minister of jobs and families and Rachel Bendayan now runs immigration, refugees and citizenship.

Among the new faces are Ontario MP Arielle Kayabaga, now government House leader and minister of democratic institutions, and Nova Scotia MP Kody Blois, minister of agriculture and agri-food and rural development.

Ontario MP Ali Ehsassi was named minister of public services and procurement and minister of "government transformation" — a new title.

There are 13 men and 11 women in Carney's cabinet. It includes no representatives from Prince Edward Island, Saskatchewan or Alberta. 

When asked about regional representation, Carney said the entire cabinet is smaller but pointed out that Freeland, who lives in Toronto, is originally from Alberta.

"And I'm prime minister of all of Canada, of course," he said.

The cabinet no longer includes a minister of women, gender equality and youth, a minister of diversity, inclusion and persons with disabilities, or a minister of mental health and addictions.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said the elimination of those ministries reveals a lot about Carney's priorities.

"At a time when we do not have a plan for workers if they lose their job — 60 per cent of workers are not covered by EI — he doesn't have a minister for labour. You might say it's just a name. Well, the name means something," he said.

Singh repeated his call for Parliament to return to pass legislation that would support workers affected by Trump's tariffs.

Singh said the exclusion of Karina Gould, who ran against Carney in the leadership race, sends "a message to progressive Liberals that there's no place for you in this new Liberal party."

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre said the new government is nearly identical to Trudeau's.

"(Carney) thinks a little bit of cosmetic surgery will allow the Liberals to disguise who they are and make people forget what they did for 10 years in order to elect them to a fourth Liberal term," he said.

Eight Trudeau-era ministers who were not planning to run in the next election were not named to Carney's cabinet, along with nine former ministers who are running.

This cabinet is expected to be in place when a general election is launched — likely before March 24, the date Parliament is set to resume.

Carney would not hint at when a federal election call might come, saying with a smile that Canadians should expect to go to the polls before November. The fixed election date is set for October.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Throne speech kicks off B.C.'s legislative session at time of 'extraordinary change'

Throne speech kicks off B.C.'s legislative session at time of 'extraordinary change'
British Columbia's legislative session opens today amid what Premier David Eby describes as a time of "extraordinary change and uncertainty." Lt.-Gov. Wendy Cocchia is scheduled to deliver the speech from the throne this afternoon, laying out the B.C. government's plan as looming U.S. tariffs threaten the Canadian economy.

Throne speech kicks off B.C.'s legislative session at time of 'extraordinary change'

Five hurt after ambulance responding to call crashes with SUV

Five hurt after ambulance responding to call crashes with SUV
RCMP say five people went to hospital after an ambulance responding to a service call crashed with an SUV west of Edmonton. The crash happened Monday along a stretch of highway in Parkland County, south of Stony Plain.

Five hurt after ambulance responding to call crashes with SUV

Joly says Canadians interested in 'being involved' in Ukraine's security after war

Joly says Canadians interested in 'being involved' in Ukraine's security after war
Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says she wants Canadians to play a role in keeping the peace in Ukraine after Russia's war ends. U.S. President Donald Trump has pledged to hold talks with Russian officials on how to end the war, which started with Moscow's 2014 invasion and escalated to a full-scale war almost three years ago.

Joly says Canadians interested in 'being involved' in Ukraine's security after war

Singh says pipelines would not be first priority for NDP energy policy

Singh says pipelines would not be first priority for NDP energy policy
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he sees an east-west clean electricity corridor as his first priority for expanding the Canadian energy market — not new pipelines. While Singh isn't shutting the door entirely to pipelines, he says pipeline projects must be accepted by the communities through which they're routed, must not hurt the environment, must provide good jobs and must meet Indigenous consultation requirements.

Singh says pipelines would not be first priority for NDP energy policy

Mark Carney trouncing Liberal leadership rivals at fundraising

Mark Carney trouncing Liberal leadership rivals at fundraising
Former central banker Mark Carney is dominating the fundraising field in the race for the federal Liberal leadership. And his main rival appears to be trailing at the back of the pack. Financial data published by Elections Canada shows Carney raised $1.9 million for his leadership bid — more than eight times the sum collected by his nearest fundraising competitor.

Mark Carney trouncing Liberal leadership rivals at fundraising

Economists more confident in Bank of Canada rate hold as inflation ticks up to 1.9%

Economists more confident in Bank of Canada rate hold as inflation ticks up to 1.9%
Economists are more confident the Bank of Canada might pause its interest rate cuts next month — tariffs notwithstanding — as Canada's annual inflation rate ticked back up in January. Statistics Canada's consumer price index on Tuesday reported the annual inflation rate rose to 1.9 per cent last month, up from 1.8 per cent in December, as the effects from a full month of the federal government's GST break were offset by higher fuel costs.

Economists more confident in Bank of Canada rate hold as inflation ticks up to 1.9%