WELCOME TO CABINET — DAVID MCGUINTY set the tone on the way to his swearing-in as public safety minister. Asked by Global News' MACKENZIE GRAY how it felt to enter Cabinet after 20 years as an MP, McGuinty replied: "I think of TOM BRADY," the legendary NFL quarterback who started his career way down the depth chart. "Hang in there, folks." — The shorter route: In happier times, ministers soak up a pleasant stroll along the driveway through the Rideau Hall grounds, admiring trees planted by royalty and world leaders. On Friday, their cars pulled up around the side of the official residence, leaving only a short jaunt to the entrance where chilly journalists lay in wait. — Walk of flame: Reporters pelted ministers with punishing questions. "Do you still have confidence in the prime minister?" Follow-up: "Why?" Also: "How long do you think this Cabinet will last?" Many walked past without indulging the questioners. NEW AND OLD — Here's the full list of Cabinet changes. → ANITA ANAND adds internal trade to her transport portfolio. → GINETTE PETITPAS TAYLOR replaces Anand as Treasury Board President. → DARREN FISHER enters Cabinet as veterans affairs minister and associate defense minister. → New minister RACHEL BENDAYAN takes official languages off Petitpas Taylor's plate, and is also associate minister of public safety. → Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister GARY ANANDASANGAREE picks up the northern affairs portfolio, which is no longer a standalone Cabinet job. ("The North is a unique place, with a unique set of issues and deserves a specific approach to tackle them all," former minister DAN VANDAL said in a farewell statement that didn't name-check the PM. Vandal signed off by saying: "Northerners deserve a federal government that listens to them, understands their issues and meets them where they are as much as any other region in the country.") → Labor Minister STEVEN MACKINNON adds the employment portfolio to his bailiwick, replacing former minister RANDY BOISSONNAULT. → ÉLISABETH BRIÈRE enters Cabinet as revenue minister, replacing MARIE-CLAUDE BIBEAU. → TERRY DUGUID, the Liberal national campaign co-chair, enters Cabinet as sport minister, replacing CARLA QUALTROUGH, and Prairies economic development minister, replacing Vandal. → NATE ERSKINE-SMITH joins the Cabinet as minister of housing, infrastructure and communities, replacing SEAN FRASER. → DAVID MCGUINTY replaces DANIEL LEBLANC as public safety minister. → RUBY SAHOTA replaces LeBlanc as minister of democratic institutions, and FILOMENA TASSI as southern Ontario economic development minister. → JOANNE THOMPSON takes the seniors portfolio from MacKinnon. — Because it's 2024: Trudeau maintained gender parity on his front bench. Navigator's CHRIS HALL noted on CPAC that Maritimers now outnumber westerners around that table. RIDINGS TO WATCH — Politics plays heavily into the whiteboard decisions about who to promote into Cabinet. Here's 338Canada's state of play in ridings held by newbies. Most are battlegrounds in key regions. → Winnipeg South, Manitoba (Duguid): Toss-up LPC/CPC → Ottawa South, Ontario (McGuinty): Toss-up LPC/CPC → Beaches-East York, Ontario (Erskine-Smith): LPC likely → Brampton North, Ontario (Sahota): CPC likely → Outremont, Quebec (Bendayan): Toss-up LPC/NDP → Sherbrooke, Quebec (Brière): BQ likely → Dartmouth-Cole Harbour, Nova Scotia (Fisher): LPC leaning → St. John's East, Newfoundland and Labrador (Thompson): Toss-up LPC/NDP MORE MUSICAL CHAIRS — The new front bench will trigger a shakeup of parliamentary secretaries — including some of the more prominent roles. Duguid was parlsec to the prime minister, and Bendayan supported CHRYSTIA FREELAND. Brière backed up Families Minister JENNA SUDDS. — New whip: Sahota's elevation to Cabinet opens a vacancy in the chief government whip's office. Former Minister MONA FORTIER, who occupies one of the safest Liberal seats in the country, is likely to take over as whip. — Foreign interference: McGuinty chaired the headline-making National Security and Intelligence Committee of Parliamentarians, where Fisher was also a member. — The farm team: Committee chairs and backbenchers who've expressed recent support for the prime minister's leadership. |