logo
‘We cannot waste any time': Anand promises ‘action' and reform in foreign affairs

‘We cannot waste any time': Anand promises ‘action' and reform in foreign affairs

CTV News5 hours ago

Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand arrives for a caucus meeting on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, May 28, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
OTTAWA — Faced with escalating conflict in the Middle East, a collapsing global trade system and a department struggling to reform itself, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand says she relishes the job of helping Canada navigate a turbulent world.
In a wide-ranging interview Thursday with The Canadian Press, Anand said her experiences in both politics and academia can help her streamline Canada's approach to global issues, allowing it to pursue its interests without losing sight of its values.
'How do you ensure, when you have these large departments, that you're actually able to execute? That is the heart of government. It's the hardest thing to do,' Anand said.
'I enjoy difficult responsibilities.'
She cited her time as defence minister, when she pushed the Canadian Armed Forces to address sexual misconduct and organized donations of military supplies to Ukraine's front line.
Previously, as procurement minister during the COVID-19 pandemic, she pushed one of Ottawa's largest and most unwieldy departments to deliver vaccines across the country within days.
Anand spoke of 'how hard it was to say, like, we gotta buy this stuff today.'
'That's kind of the same frame that I'm bringing to foreign affairs and it's super exciting,' she added.
Anand said her job involves listening closely to what the foreign service says, even if she doesn't always follow its guidance.
'You have to think independently, taking into account the advice that you receive, but also ensuring that you're discharging your obligations to the Canadian public,' she said.
'I welcome the advice that my officials provide, but at the end of the day, the decisions that I make are based on an independent judgment about what is best for our country in terms of our diplomatic relationships and our foreign policy.'
Much of her job, she said, involves supporting Prime Minister Mark Carney's quest to make Canada less dependent on the U.S. for trade and defence.
'We are considering every option to strengthen our collaboration with reliable trading partners and allies around the world,' she said.
'My role as foreign minister is to stand up for Canada in that process and to ensure that we are also standing up for peace, the safety of civilians and the respect for international law.'
Carney has set the tone for much of Canada's foreign policy and Anand is accompanying the prime minister on a diplomatic trip to Europe next week.
Canada will sign an agreement Monday in Brussels with the European Union that largely focuses on defence procurement. Carney and Anand will then head to the NATO summit in the Netherlands, where they hope to use new spending pledges from Canada and allies to keep the United States committed to collective defence.
Carney's approach to foreign policy features a major tilt toward Europe and might include more outreach in Asia and Africa ahead of summits he is set to attend this fall on both continents.
While his government is heeding allies' calls for a steep increase in defence spending, it's also bucking an international trend by promising not to cut foreign aid.
'We are deeply committed to multilateralism over unilateralism, to global co-operation over increased protectionism,' Anand said.
'We must showcase Canada's values in terms of peace, safety of civilians, and respect for international law. But we're at a time where we also need to strategically advance our economic interests here at home, and to ensure that we have defence and security arrangements in place for the protection of our own country.'
She said her ministerial background in defence, procurement, transport and the Treasury Board — which oversees all other departments' spending — gives her a unique perspective on how governments can actually follow through on their promises.
At the recent G7 summit in Alberta, she had a front-row seat as Canada's closest peers drafted statements on topics ranging from artificial intelligence to transnational repression.
The summit allowed her to meet face-to-face with both representatives of Ottawa's traditional allies and officials from emerging nations with increasing clout — including her Indian counterpart Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
The Carney government is moving to restore diplomatic relations with India — a controversial move, given the recent history between Ottawa and New Delhi.
In 2023 and 2024, former prime minister Justin Trudeau and the RCMP said there was evidence linking agents of the Indian government to the murder of Canadian Sikh separatist activist Hardeep Singh Nijjar in Surrey, B.C., in June 2023.
Last October, RCMP Commissioner Mike Duheme said the police force had evidence linking Indian government officials to other crimes in Canada, including extortion, coercion and homicide.
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service identified India as one of the main drivers of foreign interference in a report it released this week.
Anand said Ottawa is trying to restore parts of 'a long-standing relationship that has been put on hold for the last couple of years,' while respecting the law and institutions like the RCMP.
'The global strategic environment is very volatile and we need to carefully ensure that we are respecting the foundations of our democracy,' she said.
Anand was born and raised in Nova Scotia by parents who immigrated from India. As a lawyer and professor in Toronto, she focused on the field of corporate governance — on how companies can reform the way they operate.
Global Affairs Canada itself is under heavy pressure to change the way it works. The department launched a reform plan in February 2024 that included an admission that it can be 'slow to react or not focused enough' when major crises erupt, and that its staffing policies aren't keeping up with its growing responsibilities and tighter budgets.
Things have only grown more complex since then, with Washington cutting back on foreign aid and moving closer to a revanchist Russia, while China pitches more trade with Canada and other countries.
Canada has meanwhile promised to appoint new ambassadors across Africa and to open new embassies in Fiji and Benin, while somehow containing spending across government.
Canada's critics have a history of claiming it's all talk when it comes to international relations. Trudeau was frequently criticized for raising human rights issues and inserting environmental policies in trade deals while failing to meet his government's defence spending targets or supply allies with liquefied natural gas.
Foreign diplomats and departmental staff describe Anand as cautious, attentive and focused on results. While she's taking some time to get thoroughly briefed, she wants to deliver a lot — and soon.
'We have so much work to do and we cannot waste any time doing it,' she said.
'I am action-oriented myself and the prime minister knows this about me. And that's why we will make a good team on the foreign affairs front.'
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 20, 2025.
Dylan Robertson, The Canadian Press

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Retail sales inched up in April from sales gains at car dealers, but likely dropped in May
Retail sales inched up in April from sales gains at car dealers, but likely dropped in May

CBC

time29 minutes ago

  • CBC

Retail sales inched up in April from sales gains at car dealers, but likely dropped in May

Retail sales rose 0.3 per cent to $70.1 billion in April, helped by gains in sales at new and used car dealers, says Statistics Canada. However, the agency says its preliminary figures for May point to a drop of 1.1 per cent for that month. For April, six of nine sub-sectors were up, as sales at motor vehicle and parts dealers gained 1.9 per cent, boosted by a 2.9 per cent increase at new car dealers and a 2.1 per cent rise at used car dealers. Sales at sporting goods, hobby, musical instrument, book and miscellaneous retailers rose one per cent, while furniture, home furnishings, electronics and appliances retailers gained 0.8 per cent. Sales at clothing, clothing accessories, shoes, jewelry, luggage and leather goods retailers fell 2.2 per cent. Core retail sales, which exclude gasoline stations and fuel vendors and motor vehicle and parts dealers, gained 0.1 per cent in April. In volume terms, overall retail sales rose 0.5 per cent in April.

City of Ottawa spending $10 million for land to build new Barrhaven community facility
City of Ottawa spending $10 million for land to build new Barrhaven community facility

CTV News

time34 minutes ago

  • CTV News

City of Ottawa spending $10 million for land to build new Barrhaven community facility

The City of Ottawa is spending $10 million to purchase land for a new cultural and civic hub in Barrhaven and a future LRT station for the O-Train. A report for the finance and corporate services committee meeting on June 30 recommends the city purchase a 4.18-acre parcel of land at the north-west corner of the future intersection of Chapman Mills Drive and Riocan Avenue. The land will be purchased from the South Nepean Development Corporation. Staff with Parks and Facilities Planning Services, the Recreation, Cultural and Facility Services Department, and the Ottawa Public Library are planning to design and build a new facility in the Barrhaven Town Centre. The project will include a 15,000 sq. ft. cultural centre with performance and event space, a 3,000 sq. ft. seniors' space, a library branch, a councillor ward office and an urban plaza with a possible water and ice feature. Barrhaven land The City of Ottawa is buying a 4.18-acre parcel of vacant land at the north-west corner of the future intersection at Chapman Mills Drive and Riocan Avenue. (City of Ottawa report) The land could also be a future site for an LRT station if the city expands the O-Train into Barrhaven. 'The new civic hub will become a valued community asset, focal point and destination that will resonate with the people of Barrhaven and instill a sense of civic and cultural pride,' staff said in the report. 'The district library branch will serve residents in the South Nepean communities of Riverside South and Barrhaven.' Staff say the proposed civic complex is in the preliminary design stages and the LRT design will 'follow in the coming years.' There is no word on when construction will begin on the new complex. The City of Ottawa received funding under the Investing in Canada Infrastructure Program for the new facility.

Bedford beer garden on hold due to lack of parking
Bedford beer garden on hold due to lack of parking

CBC

time34 minutes ago

  • CBC

Bedford beer garden on hold due to lack of parking

Social Sharing After several months of construction and a single weekend of slinging pints, a new beer garden along the Bedford Highway has had to shut off its taps indefinitely after failing to meet permit requirements. Tony Makhoul, co-owner of the Bedford Beer Garden, said the business obtained a special occasion licence for its opening this past weekend, which he described as a success. But a Halifax Regional Municipality bylaw states the beer garden — located in a largely empty gravel lot along the highway — doesn't have enough parking for the number of seats at the location to continue to operate. "It's been a process," said Makhoul. "Over four weeks, I'd say, we've been going back and forth with the city, reconfiguring the site plan to accommodate more parking spaces or enough parking spaces to accommodate the seating." He said according to HRM standards, only about five parking spaces can be created around the 80-seat beer garden, well shy of the required 20 spots. It was Makhoul's understanding that certain building permits were only needed if the business was permanent in a space, which the beer garden is not, he said. Initial visits from municipal staff back in March first brought up concerns about a site survey and property lines. He added it was only in the last six weeks or so, after several site changes, that staff flagged parking as an issue. He estimates that around 90 per cent of the people who attended the opening weekend took alternative means of transportation, including walking and public transit, and he's not sure why the city is pressing the parking issue. Makhoul took to social media Wednesday in response to the latest rejection to ask that residents reach out to the local councillor to voice their support for the business. Councillor response Jean St-Amand, the councillor for Bedford-Wentworth, told reporters Thursday that he's received a number of messages since Makhoul's call to action asking what the Bedford Beer Garden can do to continue operating. "I had a nice meeting with [the owners] myself just to better understand what their setup was and what they were looking to be to the community," St-Amand said. The councillor's understanding is that the problem is with the proportion of parking spaces relative to the square footage the beer garden occupies, he said, and that there's not enough of an entry and exit point for people who have parked their vehicles. St-Amand said his hands are tied. The solution will likely come with reducing the square footage of the beer garden, he said. "It's a delicate balance because they'd be giving up space in order to make room for parking spaces," St-Amand added. Municipal response In an email, HRM spokesperson Brynn Budden said it's up to the business owner to show a beer garden meets requirements, including providing off-street parking in accordance with the land-use bylaw. Makhoul said the business has has asked about using a parking lot across the street after office hours and on the weekend. He said the parking bylaw states that offsite parking, along with street parking and proximity to transit stops, can be used to decrease the number of onsite parking spots needed for a business.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store