Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Names Lawrence MacAulay Veterans-Affairs Minister In Cabinet Shuffle

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2019 02:21 AM

    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is making longtime MP Lawrence MacAulay his new veterans-affairs minister to fill the void left by the resignation of Jody Wilson-Raybould as part of a minor cabinet shuffle this morning.


    Two other ministers already in cabinet are taking on new responsibilities: Marie-Claude Bibeau replaces MacAulay as agriculture minister and Gender Equality Minister Maryam Monsef takes on the additional portfolio of international development.


    That means Bibeau will be responsible for selling trade agreements to Quebec dairy farmers that will reduce the protective effect of supply management in their industry. She's also the first female federal agriculture minister.


    "It's a huge privilege — I come from a rural riding, a dairy riding, in fact, in the south of Quebec, so I'm very close to the producers in Quebec," she said outside Rideau Hall after being sworn in. She said she's eager to meet with them.


    MacAulay will take over responsibility for a new veterans-benefits regime that the parliamentary budget officer reported last week will mean less generous support for veterans leaving the Canadian Forces.


    Like Wilson-Raybould before him, MacAulay said he didn't see the move to Veterans Affairs as a demotion.


    "To have the honour to represent the people who protect peace and democracy for us worldwide, that's a long piece from a demotion," he said.


    Unusually, the official headquarters for the Department of Veterans Affairs is outside the capital region — it's in Charlottetown, MacAulay's home province.


    Wilson-Raybould, who was moved from the justice portfolio to veterans affairs in the last federal cabinet shuffle in mid-January, resigned her post Feb. 12.


    On Wednesday, Wilson-Raybould testified to the House of Commons justice committee that she was pressured by Trudeau, his senior staff and others to halt a criminal prosecution of Montreal engineering giant SNC-Lavalin.


    She said she believed she was shuffled out as attorney general and justice minister because she didn't give in to the political arm-twisting.


    Trudeau has denied the SNC-Lavalin affair had anything to do with Wilson-Raybould's move, saying she would still be justice minister had former Treasury Board president Scott Brison not suddenly decided to leave politics.


    Asked by reporters, all three of them said they will support Trudeau's decision on whether Wilson-Raybould stays in the Liberal caucus after her public criticisms of the way Trudeau and his staff handled her.


    "She's a very well-respected lady," MacAulay said of Wilson-Raybould, but what to do about her place in their party is up to the prime minister.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Air Canada Suspends Flights To India As Tensions Rise With Pakistan

    Air Canada says it has suspended service to India as tensions mount between that country and Pakistan.

    Air Canada Suspends Flights To India As Tensions Rise With Pakistan

    Canadian Forces Reports Mixed Results In Four-Year War On Sexual Misconduct

    Canadian Forces Reports Mixed Results In Four-Year War On Sexual Misconduct
    A new Canadian Forces report says its nearly four-year war on sexual misconduct in the ranks has had mixed results.

    Canadian Forces Reports Mixed Results In Four-Year War On Sexual Misconduct

    Vancouver Gang Crackdown: Police Announce More Arrests, Two Ottawa Residents Among Four More Men Charged

    Twenty-two-year-old Moeen Khan of Surrey, 30-year-old Pashminder Boparai of Abbotsford, 28-year-old Mustapha Ali of Ottawa, and 23-year-old Nobin Malonga-Massamba of Ottawa, have been charged with conspiracy to commit murder. 

    Vancouver Gang Crackdown: Police Announce More Arrests, Two Ottawa Residents Among Four More Men Charged

    Methane-Snacking Crabs Suggest They Are Adapting To Climate Change: Report

    Crabs that have a normal diet of a type of plankton have been seen munching on methane-filled bacteria off British Columbia's coast 

    Methane-Snacking Crabs Suggest They Are Adapting To Climate Change: Report

    More Help On The Way For Family That Lost Seven Children To House Fire: MP

    Offers of support and donations continue to pour in for Kawthar and Ebraheim Barho, Liberal MP Andy Fillmore said in an interview Tuesday.

    More Help On The Way For Family That Lost Seven Children To House Fire: MP

    New Brunswick Looks To Hydrogen From Seawater As Fuel For Future Power

    FREDERICTON — New Brunswick's Crown-owned power utility is partnering with a Florida-based company to develop power plants that would use hydrogen extracted from seawater as their fuel.

    New Brunswick Looks To Hydrogen From Seawater As Fuel For Future Power