Trudeau says he has no plans to trigger an election as he shuffles key cabinet positions - Action News
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Trudeau says he has no plans to trigger an election as he shuffles key cabinet positions

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said today he wants to seeevery willingCanadian vaccinatedbefore the next election butpointedout that,as prime minister in a minority Parliament,it's not entirely up to him.

Today's cabinet shuffle saw four Liberals take on new roles

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is seen outside Rideau cottage Friday. Today he shuffled a handful of his ministers. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said today he wants to seeevery willingCanadian vaccinatedbefore the next election butpointedout that,as prime minister in a minority Parliament,it's not entirely up to him.

"From the very beginning of any minority Parliament, every political party understands that elections can happen. But as I've consistently been saying, we don't want an election," he told reporters outside Rideau Hallthis morning after Canada's firstvirtual cabinetswearing-in ceremony.

"We want to continue to deliver vaccines to Canadians. We want to continue to deliver supports to Canadians, to small businesses, to families. The priority that all Canadians have right now is getting through this pandemic and that is what we are focused on."

Tuesday's shuffle was triggered by Liberal MPNavdeep Bains,who announced he wouldnot to runin the next election in orderto spend more time with family.

(CBC)

The shakeup seesFrancois-Philippe Champagne replace Bains at Innovation, Science and Industry. Marc Garneau moves from Transport to Champagne's old job as the country's top diplomat, whileMississauga Centre MP Omar Alghabrahas beenpromoted to cabinet to takeover Transport.

Winnipeg MP Jim Carr is returning as afull cabinet member. Hestepped down as the minister of international trade diversificationfollowing adiagnosis ofmultiple myelomaafter experiencing flu-like symptoms during the 2019 federal election campaign.

Today, Carr rejoins the cabinet table as aspecial representative for the Prairies.

When pressed to say whether the shuffle is part of preparationsfor anelection,Champagne saidTrudeau was looking to have ministers to serve "the long term."

"I think it goes without saying that the prime minister is looking ahead and certainly would want ministers to be present, to make sure we're facing one of the most challenging times in our nation's history, certainly with respect to the COVIDcrisis and economic recovery," he said during a media availabilityafter the oath-taking ceremony.

WATCH | Trudeau on the possibility of an election

Trudeau on the possibility of an election

4 years ago
Duration 0:36
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau explains if he will call an election before every Canadian who wants to be is vaccinated.

"So I think it goes without saying that the prime minister wanted to have continuity in a transition to ensure that the people that serve now in cabinet would be there in the long term to ensure that we serve Canadians' best interests, whether it's about creating jobs, whether it's about ensuring the heath and safety of Canadians to the vaccine."

Talk of an election comes as grim new pandemicmodelling numbers emerging inOntariosuggestthere will be more deaths in long-term care in the pandemic's second wave than there were inthe first. Since Jan. 1 of this year, 198 long-term care residents and two staffers in Ontario have died of COVID-19.

Garneau steps into Foreign Affairs

Garneau's newrole will see him forge a relationship with the incoming Biden administration in the U.S.

"I have lived in the United Statesnine years of my life, formed very strong relationships. Two of my children were born there. I believe very, very strongly that no bilateral relationship is more important than that of Canada with United States and it will continue to be that way," he said.

"We are inextricably linked, whether it's through trade, security or other matters. We are looking forward to working with the new administration under president Joe Biden and of course that will happen very, very shortly."

Garneau's role will also have him continue to push China forthe release of Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig. The two Canadians have been detained in China for two years overaccusationsof spying, charges widely seen as retaliation for Canada's arrest of Huawei executive Meng Wanzhou in December 2018.

WATCH |Jim Carr rejoins cabinet as the special representative to the Prairies

Carr will listen to the Prairie West

4 years ago
Duration 2:10
Manitoba Liberal MP Jim Carr rejoins cabinet as the special representative to the Prairies.

One of the hot files on Alghabra's desk will be the ongoing conversation with the airline industry, whichhasbeen pushing for a bailout package as the pandemic has dramatically slowed travel.

Soon after the oaths were taken Mike McNaney, president of the National Airlines Council of Canada, which represents Air Canada, Air Transat and WestJet, issued a statement urging for sector aid.

"Decisions made by the federal government in the coming weeks and months will directly and forcefully impact the future of Canadian aviation, the future of our employees, and the future of the communities we serve," he wrote.

WATCH | Alghabra reflects on his ascent to cabinet

Omar Alghabra reflects on his ascent to cabinet

4 years ago
Duration 2:06
Omar Alghabra, the veteran Liberal MP from Mississauga, was sworn in on Tuesday as the minister of transport.

"Aviation is in crisis," his statement read. "We are losing connectivity and service to communities across Canada at a rate that threatens to unwind billions of dollars in investment made over the past ten years that has supported hundreds of thousands of jobs, and driven a level of connectivity and service that underpinned economic growth in every region of Canada."

Carr, whosaid in the spring he was returning to hospital for a stem cell transplant,said he hopes to bring a western perspective to the cabinet table.

"The most important part of my job is to listen to Prairie folk, which I've been doing for the last 14 months across a wide range of economic activity," he said.

"I hope to help the prime minister and my cabinet colleagues reach out to the West, reach out to the Prairie west, and to let people who live here just know how important the development of these provinces is for the good of the whole country. So I'llcontinue to do that, now around the cabinet."

Tuesday's swearing in ceremonywith Gov. Gen. Julie Payette andPrivy Council Clerk Ian Shugartwas performed virtually due to the pandemic, a first in Canadian history.

In his farewell statementBains said that after six elections he decided 2019 would be his last, and he is stepping away from cabinet.

"I have lived the Canadian dream; I am the son of a cabinet maker who had the opportunity to serve as a cabinet minister," he said in a statement posted Tuesdaymorning.

"But it's time for me to focus on the most important job I have in life being a Dad."

Trudeau last shuffled cabinet in August

The move comes just ahead of a virtual cabinet retreat scheduled for Tuesday afternoon.

Trudeaulast had to shuffle his cabinet in August after former finance minister Bill Morneau announced he was stepping down from the key position amid the WE Charity controversy to run for a job as the next secretary general for the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

Morneau was being investigated by Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion afterrevealing that he had to repayWE Charity$41,366in travel expenses the organization had covered for him. Dion dropped his investigation in October.

Morneau was replaced by then deputy prime minister and intergovernmental affairs minister Chrystia Freeland,who handed her responsibilities for relations between the provinces to Dominic LeBlancwhile retaining the position of deputy prime minister in her newpost.

With files from David Cochrane, Peter Zimonjic

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