In a series of social media posts Tuesday, the member of Parliament for Beaches-East York said he ran in the recent election for the opportunity to make “an even bigger difference around the cabinet table and to help fix the housing crisis.”
“Congratulations to new and old colleagues who were sworn in today,” Erskine-Smith said in a post. “This moment calls for a capable team ready to get to work quickly. It’s nice to see a number of colleagues receive overdue recognition and I’m hopeful we’ll see a lot accomplished in the coming months.”
Prime Minister Mark Carney shook up his cabinet Tuesday by moving some key players involved in Canada-U.S. relations into new positions and promoting 24 new faces in a move meant to signal change at the top.
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Erskine-Smith was among 10 people Carney dropped from his cabinet.
I ran again because of the opportunity to make an even bigger difference around the cabinet table and to help fix the housing crisis. I’m not back in any role, unfortunately, so it may not surprise you to learn that it’s been a strange day on my end. /2
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Our ambitious housing plan is bigger than one person, of course. I wish the new minister well and hope we’ll see fast action to unleash the market, double down on building community housing, address chronic homelessness, and treat housing as a home first (and investment 2nd). /4
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Thanks to everyone who I’ve had the luck to work with in the housing and infrastructure role. Thanks to everyone who has had my back and reached out with kind words. Thanks to Justin Trudeau for the opportunity to make a bigger difference. /6
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Erskine-Smith, who was first elected in 2015, said in January 2024 that he wouldn’t run again in the next federal election, but reversed course in December after he was appointed minister of housing by then-prime minister Justin Trudeau.
He said that the way things played out with the new cabinet “doesn’t sit right” with him.
“But I’m mostly disappointed that my team and I won’t have the chance to build on all we accomplished with only a short runway,” he said in a social media post.
Erskine-Smith said that while “you never know what the future holds,” for now he’ll be “working hard” for his constituents, restarting his podcast and returning to Parliament with “a renewed sense of freedom.”
Also left out of the cabinet on Tuesday were former defence minister Bill Blair, former energy minister Jonathan Wilkinson, former Treasury Board president Ginette Petitpas Taylor and former environment minister Terry Duguid.
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Several MPs who were shuffled out took to social media Tuesday to express their gratitude for the opportunity to serve.
Wilkinson said serving the country in cabinet “remains one of the greatest honours” of his life.
Petitpas Taylor congratulated the members of Carney’s cabinet and said in French that she was proud to serve Moncton_Dieppe and support the government in building “a better Canada for all.”
Arielle Kayabaga, who served as minister of democratic institutions and leader of the government in the House of Commons in Carney’s first cabinet, said she was “deeply honoured” to have had the opportunity to serve as a member of the prime minister’s team.
— With files from Kyle Duggan
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