CHAIRMAN: DR. KHALID BIN THANI AL THANI
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF: PROF. KHALID MUBARAK AL-SHAFI

Default / Miscellaneous

Canadian cabinet gets fresh faces

Published: 16 Jul 2013 - 04:23 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 01:09 pm

OTTAWA: Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper appointed eight fresh faces in a cabinet shuffle yesterday, hoping to reanimate a Tory government sagging in polls after seven years in power.

Ministers with key portfolios such as finance and foreign affairs, however, will remain at their posts, according to leaks.

With two years to go in its first majority mandate, Harper’s government is at its lowest polling levels since sweeping to power in 2006.

The prime minister said yesterday that former cop Shelly Glover will be named minister of Canadian heritage and official languages, rising star Michelle Rempel will become minister of state for Western economic diversification, and Candice Bergen will be minister of state for social development.

Orthopaedic surgeon Kellie Leitch will be named labour minister, Harper said in a Twitter message. 

Veteran minister Leona Aglukkaq will move to the environment ministry, while Public Works Minister Rona Ambrose will take on Aglukkaq’s old job at the health department.

Helping Finance Minister Jim Flaherty return the federal budget to the black within a promised two years will be Kerry Lynne Find, as minister of national revenue and Kevin Sorenson, the new minister of state for finance.

James Moore will take over the industry portfolio and Bernard Valcourt will become minister of aboriginal affairs and northern development, while Gail Shea returns to his old fisheries job.

John Duncan and Peter Van Loan, meanwhile, will shepherd the government’s agenda as whip and House leader, respectively.

Chris Alexander is to become the new immigration minister, while John Baird remains at foreign affairs but is joined by junior minister Lynne Yelich.

Stephen Blaney replaces Toews as Canada’s top anti-terrorism official, and attorney general Rob Nicholson swaps jobs with defence minister Peter MacKay. AFP