Honorific-Prefix: | The Honourable |
Dominic LeBlanc | |
Office: | Minister of Public Safety, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs |
Primeminister: | Justin Trudeau |
Term Start: | July 26, 2023[1] |
Predecessor: | Marco Mendicino (Public Safety) Himself (Intergovernmental Affairs) |
Office1: | Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Infrastructure and Communities |
Primeminister1: | Justin Trudeau |
Term Start1: | August 18, 2020 |
Term End1: | July 26, 2023[2] |
Predecessor1: | Chrystia Freeland (Intergovernmental Affairs) Catherine McKenna (Infrastructure and Communities) |
Successor1: | Himself (Intergovernmental Affairs) Sean Fraser (Infrastructure and Communities) |
Office2: | President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada |
Primeminister2: | Justin Trudeau |
Term Start2: | July 18, 2018 |
Term End2: | October 26, 2021 |
Predecessor2: | Karina Gould |
Successor2: | Bill Blair |
Office3: | Minister of Intergovernmental and Northern Affairs and Internal Trade |
Primeminister3: | Justin Trudeau |
Term Start3: | July 18, 2018 |
Term End3: | November 20, 2019 |
Predecessor3: | Justin Trudeau (Intergovernmental Affairs) Carolyn Bennett (Northern Affairs) |
Successor3: | Chrystia Freeland (Intergovernmental Affairs) Dan Vandal (Northern Affairs) |
Office4: | Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard |
Primeminister4: | Justin Trudeau |
Term Start4: | May 31, 2016 |
Predecessor4: | Hunter Tootoo |
Successor4: | Jonathan Wilkinson |
Term End4: | July 18, 2018 |
Office5: | Leader of the Government in the House of Commons |
Primeminister5: | Justin Trudeau |
Term Start5: | November 4, 2015 |
Term End5: | August 19, 2016 |
Predecessor5: | Peter Van Loan |
Successor5: | Bardish Chagger |
Riding6: | Beauséjour |
Parliament6: | Canadian |
Term Start6: | November 27, 2000 |
Predecessor6: | Angela Vautour |
Birth Date: | 14 December 1967 |
Birth Place: | Ottawa, Ontario, Canada |
Profession: | Lawyer |
Education: | Lisgar Collegiate Institute |
Alma Mater: | University of Toronto (BA) University of New Brunswick (LLB) Harvard University (LLM) |
Party: | Liberal |
Residence: | Moncton, New Brunswick |
Spouse: | Jolène Richard |
Parents: | Roméo LeBlanc[3] |
Website: | Dominic LeBlanc |
Dominic A. LeBlanc (born December 14, 1967) is a Canadian lawyer and politician who has served as the Minister of Public Safety, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs since 2023. A member of the Liberal Party, LeBlanc sits as the member of Parliament (MP) for Beauséjour, representing the New Brunswick riding in the House of Commons since 2000. He has held a number of Cabinet portfolios throughout his tenure in government.
LeBlanc ran for the leadership of the Liberal Party in 2008 but dropped out of the race to endorse Michael Ignatieff, who was later acclaimed leader. With the resignation of Ignatieff after the 2011 federal election LeBlanc was considered a likely candidate in the race to succeed him as party leader, but did not run.[4] [5]
LeBlanc served as the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons in the Cabinet of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau from 2015 to 2016.[6] He served as Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard from 2016 to 2018 and Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Northern Affairs and Internal Trade from 2018 to 2019. He has served as President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada from 2018 to 2021 and began a second stint as Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs in 2020. After the 2021 federal election, LeBlanc remained as minister of intergovernmental affairs but also became minister of infrastructure and communities. In 2023, LeBlanc moved to his current role as Minister of Public Safety, Democratic Institutions and Intergovernmental Affairs, gaining responsibility for public safety and democratic institutions while remaining minister of intergovernmental affairs.
LeBlanc was born in 1967, ofAcadian descent, in Ottawa, Ontario, to Joslyn "Lyn" (Carter) and Roméo LeBlanc, a former MP, senator and 25th governor general of Canada.
As a child, he baby-sat the children of then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau. He remained friends with Justin Trudeau and endorsed Trudeau's candidacy for Liberal leader in 2012.
LeBlanc attended Lisgar Collegiate Institute for high school.[7] He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in political science from the University of Toronto (Trinity College), a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of New Brunswick, and then attended Harvard Law School, where he obtained his Master of Laws degree. LeBlanc worked as a barrister and solicitor with Clark Drummie in Shediac and Moncton. From 1993 to 1996, LeBlanc was a Special Advisor to the Prime Minister Jean Chrétien.
LeBlanc is member of the Liberal Party of Canada in the House of Commons of Canada, representing the riding of Beauséjour in New Brunswick.
LeBlanc first ran in that riding in 1997,[8] losing to New Democratic Party candidate, Angela Vautour.[9] During that race there were accusations of political patronage as LeBlanc's father was the sitting viceroy, and there was criticism that the governor general had a series of events planned in New Brunswick the very week that the election writs dropped.
In 2000 LeBlanc once again ran against Vautour, who had crossed the floor and was a Progressive Conservative, and was elected.[10] LeBlanc has been re-elected in the 2004 (where he faced Vautour for the third time), 2006, 2008, 2011, 2015, 2019, and 2021.
During the Liberal Party's time in power LeBlanc served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of National Defence, from January 13, 2003, to December 11, 2003, and was the chair of the Atlantic Caucus.
On July 10, 2004, he was sworn in as a Member of the Privy Council for Canada and appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the leader of the Government in the House of Commons and deputy chief government whip. He has served on the Special Committee on Non-Medical Use of Drugs, and the Standing Committees on Fisheries and Oceans, Transport and Government Operations, National Defence and Veterans Affairs, and Public Accounts, Procedures and House Affairs, and International Trade.
In January 2006, he was named Official Opposition critic for international trade and later that year he was co-chair of the 2006 Liberal Party leadership convention in Montreal. In January 2007, he was named by the Honourable Stéphane Dion, Vice Chair – Liberal Party of Canada Policy and Platform Committee and In October of that year, he was named Official Opposition critic for intergovernmental affairs. In January 2009, he was named by Michael Ignatieff as the critic for justice and attorney general. Before the return of Parliament in September 2010, Ignatieff shuffled his Shadow Cabinet and appointed LeBlanc as the Liberal critic for national defence.[11] Following LeBlanc's re-election in the 2011 federal election, interim Liberal leader Bob Rae appointed LeBlanc as the Liberal Party's foreign affairs critic.
See main article: 2009 Liberal Party of Canada leadership election. On October 27, 2008, LeBlanc was the first candidate to officially announce his intention to seek the leadership of the Liberal party to replace Stéphane Dion. Former leadership candidates Michael Ignatieff and Bob Rae came forward shortly after LeBlanc's announcement.[12] His supporters included top staffers in the prime minister's office under Jean Chrétien, such as his former chief of staff Percy Downe, and Tim Murphy, chief of staff under Paul Martin. Some senior organizers in Gerard Kennedy's 2006 leadership bid were also with LeBlanc.[13] On December 8, 2008, LeBlanc announced he was dropping out of the leadership race because he felt a leader needed to be put in place as soon as possible and that he was throwing his support behind Ignatieff. The next day Rae dropped out of the race and Ignatieff was acclaimed leader when Dion stepped down.[14] [15]
LeBlanc retained his seat in the 2011 election, while the Liberals dropped down to third place in the House of Commons.
Following Ignatieff's resignation as leader, LeBlanc was seen as a potential leadership candidate.[16] LeBlanc did not say whether he was considering a bid but hoped to be part of the "rebuilding and renewal" of the party.[17] Later, LeBlanc said that the next leader needs to commit 10 to 15 years of his or her life "occupied exclusively" with rebuilding the Liberal party and winning elections.[18] On October 5, 2012, he announced he would not stand for the leadership and instead endorsed Justin Trudeau.[19]
From 2012 to 2015, LeBlanc served as the Liberal opposition house leader.
On November 4, 2015, he was appointed the leader of the Government in the House of Commons in the present Cabinet, headed by Justin Trudeau. On May 31, 2016, upon the resignation of Hunter Tootoo from the Ministry, LeBlanc also became the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard. His father had previously held the equivalent position under Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau.[20]
On August 19, 2016, Leblanc was replaced as leader of the Government in the House of Commons by Bardish Chagger. He retained the post of Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard.
On July 18, 2018, Leblanc was shuffled from Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard to Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Northern Affairs and Internal Trade, a combination of two positions, Intergovernmental Affairs and Youth, and Northern Affairs.[21]
On September 12, 2018, the ethics commissioner, Mario Dion found LeBlanc broke conflict of interest rules when he awarded a lucrative Arctic surf clam licence to a company linked to his wife's cousin in February 2018.[22]
On April 26, 2019, Leblanc announced he would be stepping back from cabinet as he sought treatment for cancer.[23]
On November 20, 2019, Leblanc returned to Cabinet as President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada, a position with reduced responsibilities. His former role as Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Northern Affairs and Internal Trade, was split between the Minister of Northern Affairs, and the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs.[24]
After the resignation of Bill Morneau as Minister of Finance, Leblanc again became Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs after his successor, Chrystia Freeland, took the role of Minister of Finance in a cabinet shuffle on August 18, 2020. He retained his position as President of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada.[25]
As of 31 August 2022, Leblanc sat on seven of the 13 cabinet committees then extant:[26]
In 2003, he married Jolène Richard, a former Moncton lawyer who became a judge on the Provincial Court of New Brunswick in 2008, and eventually became a chief judge.[27] She is the daughter of Guy A. Richard, who served as Chief Justice of the Court of Queen's Bench of New Brunswick.[28] [29] He has an adult stepson.
In December 2017, he announced that he had been diagnosed with chronic lymphocytic leukemia and would begin chemotherapy immediately while continuing to serve in his parliamentary roles.
In 2019 he got a treatment with stem cells (chance of 1 to 1 million match) from an 18-year-old German donor and has been cured since.[30] After the regular two-years non-contact time between donor and patient, both have been in personal contact since then and the donor paid a visit to LeBlanc in Canada in September 2022.[31]
Notes: | inherited his arms from his father |
Year Adopted: | January 1, 1995 (granted to his father), June 24, 2009 (inherited) |
Crest: | Four eagle feathers within a circlet of Micmac quill decration Gules |
Torse: | Argent and Gules |
Escutcheon: | Argent on a pile Gules the Star of Acadia ensigned by a representation of the Royal Crown Or; |
Supporters: | Two dolphins Argent each gorged with a collar of maple leaves Gules and fleurs de lys Or, pendand therefrom a plate Azure, dexter surmounted by a steam locomotive wheel Or, sinister surmounted by a book Or |
Compartment: | Issuant from a mound set with maple leaves all Gules flanked by waves proper |
Motto: | SEMPER AMISSOS MEMINISSE DECET (It is right to remember the forgotten) |
Symbolism: | The use of white recalls the LeBlanc family name, while the pile refers to the Memramcook Valley, where Roméo LeBlanc was born, and the dolphins evoke the Rivière Dauphin (now Annapolis River), where LeBlanc's ancestors settled in the mid 17th century, as well as Roméo LeBlanc's maritime heritage and his service as the minister of fisheries. The star is a symbol long used by the Acadians, as are the fleurs de lys representative of LeBlanc's roots in that community, and the royal crown represents Roméo LeBlanc's appointment as the representative of the Canadian sovereign. The eagle feathers, a symbols of peace, honour the Canadian First Nations, and the number represents Roméo LeBlanc's four children. More family links are depicted in the steam locomotive wheelrepresenting LeBlanc's father's service on the Canadian railwaysand the book evoking Roméo LeBlanc's training and work as a teacher. The compartment symbolises a multi-ethnic Canada between two seas, and recalls the Micmac origin of the word Memramcook, meaning multi-coloured landscape. |