Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Mark Carney's cabinet has taken shape. Here are some of the highlight

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2025 04:02 PM
  • Mark Carney's cabinet has taken shape. Here are some of the highlight

Prime Minister Mark Carney has unveiled his 28-member cabinet and it's a mix of familiar and new faces from across Canada.

Carney's cabinet is smaller than that of his predecessor — former prime minister Justin Trudeau's government had 35 ministers by the end — and adds 10 secretaries of state, who are essentially junior ministers.

Carney continued with the practice of gender parity in cabinet started by Trudeau in 2015.

Some mainstays of the Trudeau government are also missing from Carney's cabinetSome portfolios are new or have been split, and some ministers have changed positions.

Some Trudeau ministers go, many stay

There are 24 new faces on Carney's team, including 13 newly elected members of Parliament.

Of the 28 ministers and 10 secretaries of state, 14 are holdovers from the Trudeau era.

Four ministers — Chrystia Freeland, Patty Hajdu, Mélanie Joly and Dominic LeBlanc — have been in cabinet since the Liberals took power in 2015.

Some notable names from Trudeau's cabinets have not carried over to Carney's team. They include former defence minister Bill Blair, former energy minister Jonathan Wilkinson and former Treasury Board president Ginette Petitpas Taylor.

Anita Anand takes over foreign affairs from Joly, who becomes minister of industry.

David McGuinty, the former public safety minister, takes on the national defence portfolio. Sean Fraser is the new justice minister, leaving the housing portfolio he held in the Trudeau era to former Vancouver mayor Gregor Robertson.

Some regions were left out of cabinet

All provinces are represented by ministers in the new Liberal cabinet, with the exception of Saskatchewan.

Desnethé–Missinippi–Churchill River's Buckley Belanger, the lone Liberal MP in Saskatchewan, will represent the province as secretary of state for rural development but is not a formal member of cabinet.

Rebecca Alty, the minister of Crown-Indigenous relations, will represent Northwest Territories in cabinet. Brendan Hanley, Liberal MP for Yukon, was not given a spot in cabinet, while Nunavut is represented by NDP MP Lori Idlout.

Including secretaries of state, Ontario has most representation at the cabinet and sub-cabinet levels — 14 people, half of them from the Greater Toronto Area. Quebec follows with nine individuals, British Columbia with five and New Brunswick and Nova Scotia with two each. Newfoundland and Labrador, Prince Edward Island, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and Northwest Territories each have one minister or secretary of state.

Canada's first Indigenous minister of Indigenous services

Mandy Gull-Masty, former grand chief of the Grand Council of the Crees, was sworn in Tuesday as the Indigenous services minister.

She is the first Indigenous person ever chosen to lead the federal department responsible for providing services to First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.

Sitting with her at the cabinet table will be rookie Anishinaabe MP and minister Rebecca Chartrand, who takes on the northern affairs portfolio, and Belanger, a Métis secretary of state.

A minister for artificial intelligence

Carney's cabinet will see the portfolios of industry and innovation separated, with a bit of extra focus added to the latter.

Joly will serve as the industry minister in cabinet, while former journalist Evan Solomon takes on a new portfolio handling artificial intelligence and digital innovation.

Solomon was elected for the first time in the April 28 election in the riding of Toronto Centre. He previously worked as a TV host for both CBC and CTV.

During the election campaign, Carney emphasized the economic potential of AI and promised to invest in AI training, adoption and commercialization. 

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. looks at coalition of willing provinces to expand trade within Canada, Eby says

B.C. looks at coalition of willing provinces to expand trade within Canada, Eby says
The threat of U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods and services has pushed the need for improved interprovincial trade as provinces look for ways to diversify their markets to protect economies and jobs. Despite the establishment of the Canadian Free Trade Agreement in 2017, many products do not trade freely among provinces and territories.

B.C. looks at coalition of willing provinces to expand trade within Canada, Eby says

Immigrant-owned firms suffer from productivity gap for variety of factors: StatCan

Immigrant-owned firms suffer from productivity gap for variety of factors: StatCan
Companies owned by newcomers to Canada tend to struggle taking their businesses to the next level more than Canadian-born founders, new data suggests. The report released by Statistics Canada on Wednesday explores barriers immigrants to Canada can face when starting and scaling a business. One of the most significant findings was around labour productivity — how much an individual can produce in an hour of work.

Immigrant-owned firms suffer from productivity gap for variety of factors: StatCan

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers
Quebec is taking steps to cut the number of international students in the province, but can't say by how many. The government will issue a maximum of around 124,000 acceptance certificates to foreign students this year, down from more than 156,000 last year. The measure targets private colleges that the government has said are using education as a business model to sell citizenship. 

Quebec caps international students but is hazy on numbers

Polls suggest a close race as federal election approaches

Polls suggest a close race as federal election approaches
Multiple polls now suggest the next federal election — which could begin in a matter of weeks — will be a tight race. At least one major pollster has the Liberals in the lead and ahead of the Conservatives for the first time in nearly four years.

Polls suggest a close race as federal election approaches

Canada, Germany working on diversifying trade in face of U.S. threats

Canada, Germany working on diversifying trade in face of U.S. threats
Canadian companies and diplomats are working with their European colleagues to find ways to diversify trade as the U.S. threatens to impose steep tariffs. Germany's Ambassador to Canada Tjorven Bellmann says European ambassadors in Ottawa have been in touch with corporations on both sides of the Atlantic to discuss how they can boost trade.

Canada, Germany working on diversifying trade in face of U.S. threats

Supreme Court of Canada moving away from social media platform X

Supreme Court of Canada moving away from social media platform X
The Supreme Court of Canada says it's moving away from the social media platform X. In an apparent farewell post to its more than 45,000 subscribers, the top court says it will focus its communication efforts on other platforms.

Supreme Court of Canada moving away from social media platform X