Close X
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Public Services Minister Judy Foote Taking Leave From Trudeau Cabinet For Family Reasons

The Canadian Press, 07 Apr, 2017 12:52 PM
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Public Services Minister Judy Foote is taking an indefinite leave of absence from her job for personal and family reasons.
     
    He says Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr will fill in for her during her absence.
     
    Trudeau says in a statement that families must always be a priority for MPs, and he commends Foote for wanting to be with her loved ones.
     
    The statement offered no other details.
     
    Foote does have a history of breast cancer, although a source familiar with the circumstances said the decision to take a leave of absence is unrelated to her health.  
     
    Foote was first diagnosed 17 years ago in 2000 while serving as a provincial politician in Newfoundland and Labrador.
     
    Foote was first elected federally in 2008 and again in 2011 in the riding of Random-Burin-St. George's. In 2014, she informed constituents that the disease had returned.
     
    Foote was re-elected in 2015 in the newly established riding of Bonavista-Burin-Trinity, where she earned nearly 82 per cent of the vote — the highest in Canada.
     
    "As Parliamentarians, our family should always be our priority, and I commend her for taking the time to be with her loved ones," Trudeau's statement said.
     
    "We look forward to having her back in Ottawa."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Economy To Grow More Slowly Over Next Two Years: Central 1 Credit Union

    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia credit union says the province's economy will remain strong through 2019, but Metro Vancouver's once-sizzling housing market will no longer fuel the growth.

    B.C. Economy To Grow More Slowly Over Next Two Years: Central 1 Credit Union

    British Columbia Premier Urges Ottawa To Make Changes To Help Tech Sector

    British Columbia Premier Urges Ottawa To Make Changes To Help Tech Sector
    VANCOUVER — Premier Christy Clark says that as the countries around the world are putting up barriers to trade and immigration, British Columbia needs to turn outward in order to grow the province's burgeoning technology sector.

    British Columbia Premier Urges Ottawa To Make Changes To Help Tech Sector

    Witness At Bertrand Charest Trial Says She Slept With Accused For First Time At 15

    Witness At Bertrand Charest Trial Says She Slept With Accused For First Time At 15
    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A witness is testifying at Bertrand Charest's sex assault trial about how her former ski coach had sex with her on numerous occasions starting when she was 15.

    Witness At Bertrand Charest Trial Says She Slept With Accused For First Time At 15

    Toronto Man Appealing Sex Assault Conviction Says Judge Was Biased

    Toronto Man Appealing Sex Assault Conviction Says Judge Was Biased
    Mustafa Ururyar is appealing his July 2016 conviction in the sexual assault of Mandi Gray, a fellow PhD student at York University with whom he had a casual relationship.

    Toronto Man Appealing Sex Assault Conviction Says Judge Was Biased

    Poppy Crosswalk To Honour Veterans In Vernon, B.C., Rejected By Legion

    Poppy Crosswalk To Honour Veterans In Vernon, B.C., Rejected By Legion
    Vernon Mayor Akbal Mund says the city is working on a new plan to honour veterans after the Royal Canadian Legion rejected a proposed poppy crosswalk.

    Poppy Crosswalk To Honour Veterans In Vernon, B.C., Rejected By Legion

    SAD Will Review Punjab Election Outcome, Says Parkash Singh Badal

    SAD Will Review Punjab Election Outcome, Says Parkash Singh Badal
    The Shiromani Akali Dal (SAD) will hold a meeting to review the party's performance in the Punjab assembly elections, said the outgoing Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal today. 

    SAD Will Review Punjab Election Outcome, Says Parkash Singh Badal