“A Major Reset”: Trudeau Overhauls Cabinet With Focus on Economic Issues

Trudeau

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives ahead of a cabinet shuffle at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on July 26, 2023. Photo: Blair Gable/Reuters

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau shuffled much of his cabinet on Wednesday, adding focus on economic issues like a housing shortage and the rising cost of living that have hurt his standing with voters.

Trudeau, whose left-leaning Liberals have been in power since November 2015, kept heavy hitters such as Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, Innovation Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne and Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly in their cabinet portfolios.

Trudeau changed or tweaked the job descriptions of about three-quarters of the positions compared with his previous cabinet, with former immigration minister Sean Fraser taking over a newly formed Housing, Infrastructure and Communities ministry.

Dominic LeBlanc becomes public safety minister, taking over for Marco Mendicino, and Arif Virani moves from the back benches to become justice minister, taking over for David Lametti. Bill Blair takes over the Defence Ministry from Anita Anand.

“This is not tinkering, it is a major reset,” said Frank Graves, president of polling company Ekos. “The shuffle does send a clear message that the government is aware that their current standing with the electorate is not healthy.”

Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has capitalized on a housing shortage and spiking inflation, and an Abacus Data poll out on Wednesday shows his party opening up a 10-percentage-point lead on the Liberals with 38% to 28% in public support.

“We are ready to keep delivering on the things that matter most to you — making life more affordable, growing the economy, and creating good jobs for the middle class,” Trudeau said in a statement.

The timing of the next election is unclear, since Trudeau commands only a parliamentary minority and relies on support from the left wing New Democrats to govern. That party has agreed to keep him in power until 2025, but the deal is not binding.

(Reporting by David Ljunggren and Steve Scherer; editing by Paul Simao, Mark Heinrich and Deepa Babington)

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