No election, no imminent shuffle, and no more talk of ‘cats and dogs’ in committee, Carney says

1 week ago 23
Mark CarneyPrime Minister Mark Carney takes part in a press conference on Parliament Hill in Ottawa April 14, 2026. Photo by Blair Gable /Postmedia

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OTTAWA — No general election, no imminent cabinet shuffle, and greater control over Parliamentary committees to prevent opposition MPs from “showboating” with talk of “cats and dogs.”

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Those are some of the commitments Prime Minister Mark Carney made about how he planned to wield his newfound majority government hours after the Liberals secured seats in three Ontario and Quebec byelections on Monday.

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Carney spoke to reporters from Parliament’s West Block the day after the byelections, which capped a historic jump from a Liberal minority government to a majority. That was largely due to the addition of five opposition MPs — four Conservatives and one NDP — who broke ranks to join the prime minister’s party in recent months.

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Carney dismissed the notion that he could call a general election anytime soon to deflect criticism that he had built his majority on “dirty backroom deals,” as has charged Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.

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“I am not considering calling an election,” Carney said flatly. He emphasized that in Canada’s Westminster democracy, voters choose MPs, not parties, and that elected officials are free to decide which political stripe best represents their constituents’ interests.

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“I think, very clearly Canadians want government to govern, to take action on immediate concerns,” he added.

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Carney also pooh-poohed rumours swirling around Parliament Hill that he is considering a cabinet shuffle before the summer recess to replace poorly performing ministers with fresh political blood.

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“It’s not in my plans,” Carney said in French. “I have the opportunity of having a very capable cabinet and there is a lot to do.”

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The prime minister reserved his strongest comments and plans for House of Commons committees, which have been a thorn in his minority government’s legislative agenda.

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Committees are important because they are a requisite step for most legislation, but they are also the place where opposition parties have the most procedural levers to delay or amend government legislation.

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That was on full display during debate on the Liberals’ controversial Bill C-9 targetting hate symbols, where Conservatives filibustered the bill for hours in opposition to a Liberal-Bloc Québécois deal that removed the religious exemption from some hate speech laws.

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Carney suggested that he aimed to rewrite committee composition quickly to give the Liberals a majority there to remove some of those levers from opposition members.

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He accused opposition parties of “showboating” on committees, a comment that is sure to raise the ire of Conservative and Bloc MPs.

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