Pallister’s new cabinet: 1 new face, 6 job changes
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 16/08/2017 (2415 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Premier Brian Pallister shuffled his cabinet modestly on Thursday, adding one new face to his inner circle, assigning new roles to a half-dozen ministers and keeping key players in place.
Signalling an increased attention to Indigenous issues, Pallister split the Indigenous and Municipal Relations portfolio in two.
Eileen Clarke, who headed the previously combined portfolio, becomes the minister of Indigenous and northern affairs, while cabinet newcomer Jeff Wharton (Gimli) takes over municipal relations.
Following a swearing-in ceremony at the Legislative Building, Pallister said his government has an ambitious agenda “on the Indigenous aspect of things.”
“We want to move forward on a number of aspects of the TRC (Truth and Reconciliation Commission) recommendations. We’ve got some resource things that we’re needing to develop with First Nations’ partnership,” he said, adding Clarke had been carrying an “incredible workload.”
Another significant move was to shift Rochelle Squires, the former minister of sports, culture and heritage, to sustainable development, where she will be the point person in the development of what the premier has called a “made in Manitoba” plan on carbon pricing.
As with health-care and marijuana, Pallister has butted heads with Ottawa over carbon pricing, and is awaiting a legal opinion on the constitutionality of the federal government’s ability to impose a carbon-pricing scheme in Manitoba.
Pallister praised Wharton’s work ethic, “enterprising approach,” and “team skills” in elevating the businessman and former councillor for the Town of Winnipeg Beach to cabinet.
“He’s demonstrated a great skillset and I think there’s no doubt (he’s) well-respected and well-liked by his colleagues,” the premier said.
Facing immediate questions from the media about when the city of Winnipeg would be notified about the size of its grant next year and other issues, Wharton begged off on a response, saying, “I’ve been sworn in for about 30 minutes.”
Pallister dropped government house leader Andrew Micklefield from cabinet. The Rossmere MLA held no portfolio. His duties will be picked up by Cliff Cullen, who leaves growth, enterprise and trade to take on the Crown services portfolio.
Cathy Cox leaves sustainable development to become the new minister of sports, culture and eritage. Meanwhile, Ron Schuler becomes the new infrastructure minister and Blaine Pedersen moves to growth, enterprise and trade.
“I don’t think it’s accurate to describe these changes as promotions and demotions,” Pallister said, when pressed by the media on why he shifted the responsibilities of some ministers.
Meanwhile, key ministers, including Health Minister Kelvin Goertzen, Finance Minister Cameron Friesen, and Justice Minister Heather Stefanson, stayed put. So did the agriculture, education and families ministers.
Arlen Dumas, grand chief of the Assembly of Manitoba Chiefs, said he was pleased that Pallister had created a separate indigenous and northern relations portfolio and expressed satisfaction that Clarke was staying on to run it.
“I am pleased she’s where she’s at, and that we’re going to continue that relationship that we’ve been building over the past year,” he said.
Shortly after her swearing in, Clarke gave Dumas a hug and said they would be speaking shortly.
Dumas told reporters he had been impressed with small gestures made by Clarke over the past 15 months that signified a change in tone from Broadway.
“Just sending a letter of acknowledgement was something significant. I had been a chief (Mathias Colomb First Nation) for 10 years prior to becoming grand chief, and I can tell you that that was a very rare thing,” he said.
NDP MLA Andrew Swan said splitting the Indigenous and municipal relations portfolio in two was the only good news from Thursday’s shuffle.
Swan said New Democrats had always felt Indigenous and northern relations merited the sole attention of a cabinet minister. “It took him (Pallister) over a year to figure it out,” he remarked.
Kicked out of the Tory caucus this summer, maverick MLA Steven Fletcher was not impressed by Thursday’s shuffle — though he praised Goertzen and Stefanson as the strongest ministers. “Sometimes, not changing portfolios is good,” Fletcher said in an interview.
There were also changes among top bureaucrats Thursday, with several deputy ministers taking on new roles and the addition of some new blood.
Pallister reached into a provincial organization of hunters, fishers, and trappers for his new sustainable development deputy minister. That job goes to Rob Olson, who has been the managing director of the Manitoba Wildlife Federation (MWF). He takes on his new role on Sept. 5.
“It tells us they believe in wildlife, and want to work to sustain wildlife populations,” said MWF past president Brian Strauman. He said Olson’s work at MWF has concentrated on ways to sustain the dwindling moose and elk populations, and to try to achieve a ban on night hunting. He could not say how well-versed Olson is in climate change and carbon-pricing policies.
With Indigenous education a government priority, Jamie Wilson, one of Manitoba’s leading Indigenous educators, is the new deputy minister of education and training. He is a former treaty commissioner and the former education director for Opaskwayak Cree Nation.
Changing roles
Eileen Clarke, Minister of Indigenous and northern relations
Clarke is the MLA for Agassiz. She was elected in 2016. She was previously the minister of Indigenous and municipal relations.
Ron Schuler, minister of infrastructure
Schuler is the MLA for St. Paul, where he was first elected in 1999. He was previously the minister of Crown services.
Cliff Cullen, minister of crown services, government house leader
Cullen is the MLA for Turtle Mountain, where he was first elected in 2004. He was previously the minister of growth, enterprise and trade.
Blaine Pederson, minister of growth enterprise and trade
Pederson is the MLA for Midland, where he was first elected in 2007. He was previously the minister of infrastructure.
Cathy Cox, minister of sports, culture and heritage
Cox is the MLA for River East. She was elected in 2016. She was previously the minister of sustainable development.
Rochelle Squires, minister of sustainable development
Squires is the MLA for Riel. She was elected in 2016. She was previously the minister of sport, culture and heritage. She keeps responsibility for women and Francophones.
Staying put
Heather Stefanson, minister of justice and attorney general
Stefanson is the MLA for Tuxedo, where she was first elected in 2000.
Cameron Friesen, minister of finance
Friesen is the MLA for Morden-Winkler, where he was first elected in 2011.
Kelvin Goertzen, minister of health, seniors and active living
Goertzen is the MLA for Steinbach, where he was first elected in 2003.
Ian Wishart, minister of education and training
Wishart is the MLA for Portage la Prairie, where he was first elected in 2011.
Scott Fielding, minister of families
Fielding is the MLA for Kirkfield Park. He was elected in 2016.
Ralph Eichler, minister of agriculture
Eichler is the MLA for Lakeside, where he was first elected in 2003.
A new face in cabinet
MLA Jeff Wharton, municipal affairs minister
Wharton, elected in Pallister’s sweep in 2016 in Gimli, is the only new face in cabinet.
larry.kusch@freepress.mb.ca
nick.martin@freepress.mb.ca
Larry Kusch
Legislature reporter
Larry Kusch didn’t know what he wanted to do with his life until he attended a high school newspaper editor’s workshop in Regina in the summer of 1969 and listened to a university student speak glowingly about the journalism program at Carleton University in Ottawa.
History
Updated on Thursday, August 17, 2017 12:32 PM CDT: Updates
Updated on Thursday, August 17, 2017 8:08 PM CDT: full write through