TORONTO -- Bill Morneau, Canadaâs finance minister, is stepping down amid the ongoing scandal of accepting gifts from WE Charity and rumours of a growing rift with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
Morneau, who has held the post for five years, announced his resignation Monday evening in a press conference from Ottawa. He will give up both his cabinet role and his seat as member of Parliament for Toronto Centre.
He announced he will make a bid to become secretary general of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
Morneau said he told Trudeau he wasnât going to run in the next federal election and that he only ever intended to serve in two governments. He said now is the âright time for a new finance ministerâ to manage a âlong and uncertainâ recovery as Canada rebuilds from the economic downturn brought on by COVID-19.
Morneau denied he was asked to quit or was otherwise forced out. Instead, he said that he had come to the conclusion he was no longer the âmost appropriate personâ for the job of finance minister because he wasnât going to be there for the long haul.
He also dismissed speculation of strife between him and the prime minister leading to his decision to quit. He said his relationship with Trudeau was built on âvigorous discussion and debateâ but that always led to better policy. Serving as finance minister was âthe work of a lifetime for me,â said Morneau.
In a statement, Trudeau said Morneau âworked relentlessly to support all Canadians and create a resilient, fair economy that benefits everyone.â
He said Canada would âvigorously supportâ his bid to lead the OECD.
âI want to thank Bill for everything he has done to improve the quality of life of Canadians and make our country a better and fairer place to live. I have counted on his leadership, advice, and close friendship over the years and I look forward to that continuing well into the future. Bill, you have my deepest gratitude and I know you will continue making great contributions to our country and for Canadians in the years to come."
Canadian business leaders also thanked Morneau and his âcommitment to sound public policy over the past five years in extremely challenging circumstances,â and expressed support for his OECD bid, in a statement by Goldy Hyder, president and chief executive of the Business Council of Canada.
But opposition parties wasted no time taking aim at Trudeau.
Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer said Trudeau was âscapegoatingâ his hand-picked finance minister.
âAt a time when Canadians are worried about their health and their finances, Justin Trudeauâs government is so consumed by scandal that Trudeau has amputated his right hand to try and save himself,â he tweeted.
âIn the middle of a financial crisis, Justin Trudeau has lost his Finance Minister,â tweeted NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh. âEvery time he gets caught breaking ethics laws, he makes someone else take the heat. That's not leadership.â
Reports have swirled for weeks that Trudeau and Morneau were at odds over the charity scandal, environmental initiatives, and pandemic relief spending. Morneau has been in the crosshairs of opposition parties since the WE Charity scandal broke last month.
Last Tuesday, the Prime Ministerâs Office issued a statement saying the prime minister had âfull confidenceâ in Morneau.
WE Charity, which was granted a contract worth up to $43.5 million to deliver a now-cancelled $912-million student grant program, partly paid for two trips for Morneauâs family members to Kenya and Ecuador, including one trip he took part in himself.
Morneau said he made an âerrorâ and intended to cover the cost of the trips. He then cut a cheque for $41,000.
Canadaâs ethics commissioner is now investigating both Morneau and Trudeau for not recusing themselves from decision-making around the contract, given their family connections to WE Charity.
NDP ethics critic Charlie Angus said it was âabsolutely clearâ Trudeau needed to change the focus ahead of the ethics commissionerâs report. He noted that Trudeau had done âa very good jobâ of reassuring Canadians during the pandemic, but got sidetracked by the WE scandal.
âThis has really damaged the prime minister. Theyâre trying to find a way to put a Band-Aid on it, so theyâre using the dog days of August. But the fact that a finance minister in the biggest economic crisis in a century has to walk the plank ⌠weâre in uncharted territory here,â said Angus.
âItâs about the prime ministerâs judgment, itâs about the people he surrounds himself with.â
Lori Williams, a political science professor at Mount Royal University in Calgary, told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel that the resignation is a case of Morneau âfalling on his sword for the sake of the party and for the government.â
She said itâs possible a deal has been struck in which Morneau can take on a role with the government down the road. But his removal wonât be enough for a âresetâ for the government. The next step -- finding a replacement -- will be crucial, she says.
Speculation will now begin about who will take Morneauâs place, but there has been plenty of talk that former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, who has been seen as a highly coveted potential politician, has had the ear of Trudeau about the best course for economic recovery.
Williams says itâs âtrickyâ to appoint a cabinet minister who hasnât been elected to Parliament, but it has happened before.
Political analyst Michael Geoghegan called the announcement a âbombshellâ and said there are two main ways Trudeau might fill Morneauâs position.
âIf Trudeau is going to look at a Mark Carney, heâs got a riding Mark can run in, and at the same time, he can as prime minister, appoint him directly as minister of finance,â Geoghegan told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel.
âThe other more conventional scenario that has been discussed is taking a cabinet member like Chrystia Freeland and putting her in as finance minister. Certainly this is a significant shake-up to the Trudeau government.â
Sources told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝, however, that Mark Carney will not be taking over as finance minister.
Morneau, who grew up in Toronto and holds a masters of economics degree and an MBA, led human resources firm Morneau Shepell, founded by his family, between 1990 and 2015. He is married to Nancy McCain, whose family owns McCain Foods.
He was the first political rookie to take on the crucial finance minister role since 1919.
This is not the first time Morneau has come under fire for ethics issues. In 2017 he faced criticism and questioning over using an ethics loophole to not put his assets in a blind trust after becoming a minister, which the then-ethics commissioner cleared him on; as well as for not disclosing a family villa in France.
Conservative strategist Jamie Ellerton told ŰÎŰ´ŤĂ˝ Channel that the PM âsavaged his finance minister over the past couple of weeksâ with âconstant leaksâ aimed at destroying his credibility and reputation that forced him to resign.
He said there is âpolitical blood in the waterâ and that opposition parties will be even more focused on hammering the Liberals over the WE Charity scandal.
With files from Rachel Aiello in Ottawa