Hunter Tootoo suddenly resigns from Liberal cabinet to seek treatment for addiction - Action News
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Politics

Hunter Tootoo suddenly resigns from Liberal cabinet to seek treatment for addiction

Hunter Tootoo has suddenly resigned his position as minister of fisheries and oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard to seek treatment for addiction.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says exit was fisheries minister's own choice after 'very difficult situation'

Liberal cabinet minister quits to seek addiction treatment

8 years ago
Duration 2:08
Hunter Tootoo steps down as Fisheries minister, leaving Trudeau's cabinet and Liberal caucus

Prime Minister Justin Trudeauhas lost his first cabinet minister in abrupt and mysterious circumstances, shocking his colleagues in theLiberal caucus.

Trudeau issued a statement on Tuesday night sayingHunter Tootoo hadresigned his position as minister of fisheries and oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, and was leaving the Liberal caucusto seek treatment for addiction.

On Wednesday morning the prime minister told reporters on his way into his weekly caucus meeting that the sudden departurewas Tootoo'schoice, after a very difficult situation. Trudeaudid not elaborate or take questions.

Though previous governments have lost cabinet ministers in their first year,Tootoo'sresignation is the latest difficultyfor a Liberal government that, while still popular, has been dealing with a number of challenges this spring.

Tootoo'saddiction issuesare beinghandled very differently from how they were dealt withwhen, earlier this year,Liberal MPSeamusO'Regan, a newly electedMP for St. John's South-Mount Pearl, announcedhe was entering a "wellness program" to adopt an "alcohol free lifestyle."

O'Regan did not leave the Liberal caucus at the time, whileTrudeauwent on Twitter to say his thoughts were withhis "friend & colleague" and thatO'Reganhad his "full support."

This timeTrudeauissued acurt statement announcing Tootoo's departureand subsequent changesto the Liberal cabinet.

"Effective immediately, the Honourable HunterTootoohas resigned from his position as minister of fisheries, oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard,"Trudeausaid in the statement."He will also be leaving the Liberal caucus."

"Mr.Tootoowill be taking time to seek treatment for addiction issues."

Trudeau went on to say government House leaderDominic LeBlanc will be assuming Tootoo's ministerial rolesin addition to his existing duties.

The statement does notidentify the nature of the addiction issues or explain why Tootoo had resignedfrom caucus. The Prime Minister's Office would not elaborate on Trudeau's statement.

Tootoo released a short statement Tuesday evening.

"As of today I have resigned as minister of fisheries, oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard and will be stepping down as a member of the Liberal caucus in order to not distract from the important work of my colleagues," the statement read.

"I have decided to seek treatment for addiction issues and ask for privacy at this time."

Tootoo is a cousin of NHL player Jordin Tootoo, who recently authored a book detailing not only his struggles in the NHL, but his continuing battle with alcohol addiction.

Liberal MPs speaking on background have told CBC News that they were floored to hear the news but did not know any more details than were in the PMO release.

Former interim Liberal leader Bob Rae, however, did wish Tootoo well in recovery in a tweet Tuesday evening.

A challenging spring for the Trudeau government

Tootoo's resignation came just after the Liberals succeeded in passing C-14, the government's legislation on medically assisted death, through the House of Commons. Amid concerns about the bill's scope and constitutionality and with the government eager to see the legislation passed before June 6, C-14now faces an uncertain future in the Senate.

It comes after loud complaints from the opposition about the government's handling of the House and two weeks after the prime minister was compelled to apologize for manhandling the opposition whip, inadvertently elbowing NDP MP Ruth Ellen Brosseau in the process.

That incident was followed by the Liberals withdrawinga procedural motion that Conservatives and New Democrats decried as an abuse of power.

Meanwhile, the Liberals continue to be criticized for their handling of electoral reform.

The Trudeau government is at least not the first government to lose a cabinet minister within its first year. Less than five months after Brian Mulroney's Progressive Conservative government came into office in 1984, the defence minister, Robert Coates, resigned after it emerged he had visited a strip club in West Germany. (Two more ministers would resign just after the Mulroney government celebrated its first anniversary.)

In 2006, Michael Chong quit Stephen Harper's cabinet after nine months when Chong decided he could not support the government's motion to declare the Quebecois a nation within a united Canada.

A rough start in life

Tootoo was born in Rankin Inlet in 1963 and immediately had to fight for his life.

"I was medevaced[airlifted]out," Tootoo told The Canadian Press in an interview last year.

"I was in an incubator for the first three months of my life, so I am told."

After overcoming this struggle, Tootoo went on to live in various parts of Canada, including Quebec, Ontario, Alberta and Saskatchewan before making his way back to the North in the early 1990s.

The 52-year-old was first elected as the member of the legislature for Iqaluit Centre in 1999, where he served for 14 years. Hewas the Speaker of theNunavutlegislature until 2013. He also held a number of cabinet positions in the territorial government.

In November, a month after Tootoo defeated former Conservative cabinet minister Leona Aglukkaq to claim the federal riding of Nunavut, he said in an interview he hoped to transfer his political experience to a national scale.

"I think that it is going to be very beneficial to me as we move forward."

With files from The Canadian Press