In what is the biggest reorganization of Trudeau’s cabinet since taking office in 2015, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada appointed seven newcomers, demoted seven existing members, and reassigned the majority of other roles.
Happening now: I’m speaking with reporters about the changes we’ve made to Cabinet, our ongoing commitment to delivering results for Canadians, and our positive vision for the future. Tune in here: https://t.co/aumw41nJyg
— Justin Trudeau (@JustinTrudeau) July 26, 2023
In the shuffle, a total of seven ministers were phased out, as Trudeau looks to elevate several backbench Liberal MPs from key electoral battlegrounds in Ontario, Quebec, and British Columbia. Only eight ministers remained in their initial positions, underscoring the scale of Trudeau’s reshuffle. These included Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland and Environment and Climate Change Minister Steven Guilbeault.
FIRED WITHOUT CAUSE: Justin Trudeau chooses not to respond to reporter ignoring the question entirely.
— Rowan Thee Stallion 🏇 (@canmericanized) July 26, 2023
“Can you explain your decision to fire Marco Mendicino, Mona Fortier & David Lametti & remove them entirely from Cabinet.” #cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/abo0btoTOT
Among the high-profile reshuffles was the transfer of Anita Anand from the Defense Ministry to the position of Treasury Board president, replaced by former police chief and emergency preparedness officer Bill Blair. Among other significant changes, close Trudeau associate Marc Miller was appointed as the minister of immigration, refugees, and citizenship, while Ahmed Hussen— who has gained an unfavourable reputation among Canadians over his handling of the housing crisis, was assigned to international development and replaced by former immigration minister Sean Fraser.
It's cabinet shuffle day!
— Justin Trudeau's Ego (@Trudeaus_Ego) July 26, 2023
I'm bringing in lots of new faces, all of whom are losing in the polls in their respective ridings. But I swear, this has nothing to do with a potential fall election.
Don't worry, Minister of Affairs Mélanie Joly will remain in her position. pic.twitter.com/ZfsM5XRaCa
Randy Boissonnault became the new minister of employment, while Pablo Rodriguez takes over as transport minister. Meanwhile, Trudeau’s close friend and ally Dominic LeBlanc takes on public safety, while gaining responsibility for the Liberals’ contested gun control legislation and RCMP reform.
How did Justin Trudeau manage to make an even worse cabinet than the raw pile of manure he was tending to last week?
— Keean Bexte (@TheRealKeean) July 25, 2023
This reshuffle, which did not alter the size of the cabinet (38 members equally split by gender, excluding the prime minister), was likely orchestrated to diminish negativity surrounding Trudeau’s economic team on critical issues such as housing affordability and the transition to clean energy after eight years in power.
“The one minister who is responsible for these failures didn’t get moved, and that minister is Justin Trudeau,” Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre tells reporters in Timmins, Ont., as he reacts to today’s cabinet shuffle.#cdnpoli pic.twitter.com/edN8JtiuQ6
— CPAC (@CPAC_TV) July 26, 2023
I think the cabinet shuffle today won’t help the liberals much. The crux of the problem is the PM Justin Trudeau, their policies, & their incompetence/scandals. I think the general public is sick of the liberal party and want new leadership and management. Especially, the… https://t.co/OuxpMusEkv
— Jennifer Wu (@JenniferLiaXi) July 26, 2023
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