Former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney will chair a Liberal task force on economic growth, the party announced Monday as Liberal MPs meet to strategize for the upcoming election year.
Long touted as a possible leadership successor to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Carney was already scheduled to address caucus as part of the retreat in Nanaimo, B.C., this week.
The Liberals say he will help shape the party鈥檚 policies for the next election, and will report to Trudeau and the Liberal platform committee.
鈥淎s chair of the Leader鈥檚 Task Force on Economic Growth, Mark鈥檚 unique ideas and perspectives will play a vital role in shaping the next steps in our plan to continue to grow our economy and strengthen the middle class, and to urgently seize new opportunities for Canadian jobs and prosperity in a fast-changing world,鈥 Trudeau said in a statement.
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland would not stop to answer questions about Carney鈥檚 new role on her way into a meeting about rural issues on Monday.
Trudeau is expected to address Liberal members of Parliament later this week. It will be the first time he faces them as a group since MPs left Ottawa in the spring.
Still stinging from a devastating byelection loss earlier this summer, the caucus is now also reeling from news that its national campaign director has resigned and the party can no longer count on the NDP to stave off an early election.
Last week, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh ended his agreement with Trudeau to have the New Democrats support the government on key votes in exchange for movement on priorities such as dental care.
All of this comes as the Liberals remain well behind the Conservatives in the polls despite efforts to refocus on issues like housing and affordability.
Some Liberal MPs hope to hear more about how Trudeau plans to win Canadians back when he addresses his team this week.
Carney appears to be part of that plan, attempting to bring some economic heft to a government that has struggled to resonate with voters who are struggling with inflation and soaring housing costs.
鈥淚 think it鈥檚 going to be very helpful to have a perspective that鈥檚 from outside of politics, that is someone that is esteemed in the space of economic leadership,鈥 said Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu on her way into a meeting with colleagues Monday.
Trudeau said several weeks ago that he has long tried to coax Carney to join his government.
The economist and former investment banker spent five years as the governor of the Bank of Canada during the last Conservative government before hopping across the pond to head up the Bank of England for seven years.
Carney鈥檚 is just one of a host of names suggested as possible successors to Trudeau, who has insisted he will lead the party into the next election despite simmering calls for him to step aside.
Those calls reached a new intensity earlier this summer when the Conservatives won a longtime Liberal stronghold in a major byelection upset in Toronto鈥擲t. Paul鈥檚.
But Trudeau held fast to his decision to stay and rejected calls to convene his entire caucus over the summer to respond to their concerns about their collective prospects.
The prime minister has spoken with Liberal MPs one-on-one over the last few months and attended several regional meetings ahead of the Nanaimo retreat, including Ontario and Quebec, which together account for 70 per cent of the caucus.
While several Liberals who don鈥檛 feel comfortable speaking publicly say the meetings were positive, the party leader has mainly held to his message that he is simply focused on 鈥渄elivering for Canadians.鈥
Nova Scotia MP Jaime Battiste said ultimately it鈥檚 not about what Liberals hear from their leader, it鈥檚 what Canadians want to hear from him.
鈥淚鈥檓 totally confident with his vision,鈥 said Battiste, who says he doesn鈥檛 put much faith in the poll numbers.
Conservative House leader Andrew Scheer was in Nanaimo ahead of the meeting to express his scorn for the Liberal strategy session, and for Carney鈥檚 involvement.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter what happens in this retreat, doesn鈥檛 matter what kinds of (communications) exercise they go through, or what kind of speculation they all entertain about who might lead them in the next election,鈥 said Scheer, who called a small press conference on the Nanaimo harbourfront Monday.
鈥淚t鈥檚 the same failed Liberal policies causing the same hardships for Canadians.鈥
He said Carney and Trudeau are 鈥渂asically the same people,鈥 and that Carney has supported Liberal policies, including the carbon tax.
The three-day retreat is expected to include breakout meetings for the Indigenous, rural and women鈥檚 caucuses before the full group convenes later this week.