OTTAWA (Reuters) – Two more Canadian government ministers said on Tuesday they would step down at the next election, freeing up room inside Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet for a reshuffle that he will unveil this week.
Trudeau, who last carried out a major shake-up in October 2021, is looking to refresh his left-leaning Liberal Party team ahead of an election that must be called by October 2025 and could happen earlier.
Transport Minister Omar Alghabra, 53, said he would leave the cabinet immediately and not run in the next election.
“The prime minister deserves a cabinet (that) is committed to running in the next federal campaign,” he said in a video. Public Procurement Minister Helena Jaczek, 72, said on social media that she also would not run again.
Ministers who announce they intend to leave politics are usually dropped quickly from the cabinet. Mental Health Minister Carolyn Bennett, 72, said on Monday she would not be a candidate in the next election.
Liberal sources say the shuffle will happen this week and could be announced as early as Wednesday.
Trudeau won a parliamentary majority in 2015 but was reduced to leading a minority government after elections in 2019 and 2021. He relies on the support of the smaller, left-of-center New Democrats, who have agreed to keep him in power until 2025, though that deal is not binding.
Alghabra took over the transport portfolio in January 2021. Opposition parties heavily criticized him last year after travelers repeatedly faced long delays at Toronto’s main airport.
Jaczek had been in her cabinet position for less than a year.
(Reporting by David Ljunggren; Editing by Paul Simao)