Trudeau to tap ally Freeland as finance minister in agenda reset
- The appointment comes after a tumultuous week for the government that ended in Bill Morneau stepping down as finance minister on Monday night.
- Freeland's experience renegotiating a North American trade deal and her relationships with provincial premiers make her a good choice.
OTTAWA: Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will tap close ally and deputy Chrystia Freeland as his new finance minister and suspend Parliament until October, sources said on Tuesday, when he plans to outline a revamped agenda and pandemic recovery plan.
Freeland, 52, a former journalist and foreign minister, will become the country's first female finance minister after her predecessor resigned on Monday amid friction with Trudeau.
The appointment comes after a tumultuous week for the government that ended in Bill Morneau stepping down as finance minister on Monday night. Sources told Reuters that Morneau and Trudeau had clashed over pandemic spending, including on green initiatives the prime minister views as key for the economy.
The swearing-in ceremony has been set for 2 p.m. ET (1800) on Tuesday, with a news conference to follow at 3:30 p.m.
Freeland's experience renegotiating a North American trade deal and her relationships with provincial premiers make her a good choice, one source said, confirming reports by CTV and the Canadian Broadcasting Corp.
Trudeau also plans to end this parliamentary session and restart a new one in October, when he will deliver a new agenda outlining a COVID-19 pandemic recovery plan, the source said.
Freeland, who is considered Trudeau's most likely successor as Liberal Party leader, spearheaded negotiations of the United States-Mexico-Canada (USMCA) trade pact as Canada's foreign minister and minister for international trade in Trudeau's previous cabinet.
Now she will be tasked with reviving an economy crippled by the COVID-19 pandemic, with the budget deficit this fiscal year forecast to hit C$343.2 billion ($253.4 billion). That would be the largest shortfall since World War Two.
"Freeland does not have the business background of her predecessor, but she managed the ministry of foreign affairs file remarkably well, including dealing with the difficult renegotiation of free trade with the United States," said Craig Alexander, chief economist with Deloitte Canada.
"Markets will likely anticipate that the new minister of finance will work exceedingly well with the prime minister," he said.
The Canadian dollar notched its strongest intraday level in nearly seven months at 1.3148 per US dollar, or 76.06 US cents, amid broader declines for the greenback. Bond yields were little changed.
Markets are reassured because Trudeau is taking advice from some economic heavyweights, including former central banker Mark Carney.
Freeland also holds the intergovernmental affairs portfolio, which will probably go to Domenic LeBlanc, the source said.
Before entering politics in 2013, Freeland worked with several media companies, including the Financial Times, the Globe and Mail, and Reuters.
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