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PEI

Why prime ministers and premiers shuffle their cabinet

Keeping allies, maintaining morale and keeping a strong grip on the party are all things that hinge on the success of a cabinet shuffle.

A bad shuffle can lead to 'internal dissent and that can get problematic as well'

Pablo Rodriguez is sworn in as minister of Canadian heritage and multiculturalism during a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Wednesday, July 18, 2018. (Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)

Keeping allies, maintaining morale and retaining a strong grip on the party are all things that hinge on the successof a cabinet shuffle.

It's a process that happens at the provincial and federal level falling on prime ministers and premiers to choosehow their fellowpoliticians rise to, orslide and shift from, a range of portfolios.

Anddepending on who you ask, eachshufflemeans something different.

"It's one of the toughest jobs that a prime minister or a premier will have because it's really important that you have a strong and unified team," said former P.E.I.premier Pat Binns.

"Keeping everybody happy is important. If people are disgruntled it doesn't bode well for the team."

Binns has been both the shuffledand the shufflerduring his time as an MLA and as thepremier of Prince Edward Island.

Pat Binns
Former premier Pat Binns says, regarding cabinet shuffles, 'from day one you have to be anticipating that there will need to be changes.' (Mitch Cormier/CBC)

As premier, most of the time a cabinet shuffle hadto do with keeping things fresh for a minister, he said, by switching them around to different portfolios and playing to a politician's strengths.

Shuffling cabinet is something that dwells on a premier's mind from the very first hour on the job, he said; keeping an eye on ministers, seeing how well people are performing and sculpting a strategy around who neededto be moved around and when.

You want to keep your backbenchers thinking that they have an opportunity in the cabinet. Don Desserud

"From day one you have to be anticipating that there will need to be changes. You might find that someone is really better at a particular job than someone else," he said.

"You're looking at it all the time or thinking about it all the time."

Like a hockey coach shuffling lines

DonDesserud, a political science professor at UPEI, says moving ministers around is often a healthy measure by a leader that's done to keep people happy and energetic.

"Getting people moved around often gives them new vitality, new spirit and a new enthusiasm. I liken it to a hockey coach shuffling his lines in a hockey game to get his team more motivated," he said.

'There are circumstances where you have two very powerful individuals in government who on the inside are rivals,' says Don Desserud, which can lead to a cabinet shuffle. (CBC)

Althoughat times in history shuffles have risen fromsour, in-party spats that have caused rifts in the ranks.

As a result some ministershave leftcabinet willingly or not.

One of the most notable spats, Desserud said,was between former prime minister Jean Chrtienand finance minister Paul Martin in the early 2000sas Martin had been a rival for the leadership.

In summer 2002, inthe second cabinet shuffle for theChrtienLiberals in a single week, Martin was replaced byJohn Manley a move characterizingtheinfightingbetween the two at the time.

"There are circumstances where you have two very powerful individuals in government who on the inside are rivals," Desserud said.

"And that can be a case for prime ministers saying 'this person is more trouble than they're worth.'"

The Chrtien-Martin feud boils over in 2002

22 years ago
Duration 10:09
Jean Chrtien unceremoniously boots Paul Martin Jr. from his cabinet. Aired June 2, 2002 on a special edition of CBC's Sunday Report.

'You can get internal dissent'

In Prime Minister Trudeau's cabinet shuffle this week, four new ministers were added to cabinet and about 10 more were shuffled around.

Some of the new ministers promoted to a cabinet position come from the Liberal backbench, and, Desserud said, it's a strategic play by leaders to keep the ranks happy.

Filomena Tassi, centre, sits with Bill Blair, left, and Jonathan Wilkinson at a swearing in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

"That's a way of keeping your backbencher caucus in play as well. You want to keep them motivated, you want to keep your backbenchers thinking that they have an opportunity in the cabinet too," he said.

"If the dooris always closed, they get discouraged and then you can get internal dissent and that can get problematic as well."

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