Support strong Canadian climate journalism for 2025
Karina Gould knows how to throw a hefty political punch, and she often does it with a smile.
Just six months into her role as government House leader, Gould has redefined what it means to be a prime minister's chief attack dog.
During a fall parliamentary sitting that often looked out of control, political insiders say Gould was a steady thorn in her opponents' sides: calm and cutting at the same time.
They are crediting her with re-energizing the Liberal caucus after the party's poll numbers plummeted last year, while Opposition Conservatives relished in their own gains.
"For the last year, it felt like the Conservatives were the only party competing," said Fred DeLorey, a former national campaign manager for the Conservative Party of Canada.
"It wasn't clear what the Liberals were doing, if they were in search of a narrative or if they didn't understand they needed one. But it feels like in the last month, especially, there's something coming together there, and their attacks are becoming more pointed."
Gould is leading that charge, DeLorey said.
She is the youngest woman to have ever served as a federal cabinet minister, and the first federal minister to give birth while in office.
Her second child is due this month.
Right before Gould went on maternity leave in mid-December and the House adjourned for the holidays, she delivered a final message to Pierre Poilievre and his Conservative party that played heavily on her identity as a mom.
She had just removed an agenda item from the House's order paper after the Tories attempted, for the second time that month, to delay government work and keep MPs working late leading up to Christmas.
"Instead of entertaining his temper tantrum, I'm going to suggest he takes a little bit of a time out," she said about Poilievre in front of the House of Commons.
She stopped short of equating Tory MPs' behaviour to children. That would be too insulting to Canadian children, she said.
In a year-end interview with The Canadian Press, Gould said she's the same person when cameras are rolling on Parliament Hill as she is when she's at home in Burlington, Ont., the riding she represents nestled halfway between Toronto and Niagara Falls.
"There's no performance to me. I'm just telling you how it is and how I see things," Gould said.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appointed her to lead the Liberals' agenda in the House of Commons in July after she had served as the minister for families, children and social development for nearly two years.
In that role, she dealt with a passport application backlog that caused major delays and political strife. She also helped oversee the Liberal government's marquee $10-a-day child-care plan, which included finalizing a deal with Ontario.
In previous parliamentary sessions, Gould also served as minister for international development and minister for democratic institutions.
The prime minister is clearly chuffed about her performance in the new role.
In a speech at a holiday party for the Liberal caucus in December, Trudeau spent a full two minutes praising Gould's accomplishments. She was the only minister he name-checked.
"We're lucky to have you, as a team and as a country," Trudeau said, and Gould got a prolonged standing ovation.
She admits there was no shortage of crisis and challenges in the fall sitting.
Former Speaker Anthony Rota, a Liberal MP, resigned his post amid controversy in September. During a visit by Ukraine's president to the Canadian Parliament, he honoured a Ukrainian Canadian veteran who fought for a Nazi unit in the Second World War.
"As someone whose family suffered immensely at the hands of the Nazis, it was a very difficult personal moment," Gould said.
Later, questions were raised about the new Speaker's conduct after Greg Fergus — another Liberal MP — filmed a video that was shown at a partisan event.
"Part of your job as leader is to be able to figure out a path forward," she said, during difficult moments.
"I think that's something that I managed to do over the past number of months."
As House leader, she helped the minority Liberal government get unanimous support to fast-track a bail-reform bill in September, which became law last month. She also shepherded through a bill that sought to address the affordability crisis by creating a tax break for new rental developments and updated competition laws.
Greg MacEachern, a Liberal strategist and founder of KAN Strategies, said Gould was successful in portraying "a calm competence" throughout.
"Karina Gould's style is that of someone who is able to remain calm while the temperature is rising in the House," MacEachern said.
"No Liberals have questions over how she handled things, and they tend to like the contrast between her way of just continuing to speak at a very modulated level, pointing out the facts, driving a hole through the Conservative argument, yet doing it without seeming to sweat."
DeLorey said Gould has proven to be a solid communicator who is able to point out Tory weak points.
"The Conservatives need to make sure they can effectively counter that and push back when it's warranted," he said.
But at this point, he noted, Tories have yet to directly challenge Gould, proving she was the right pick to throw Trudeau's punches.
"She has been landing them, and it hasn't been something we've seen in some time," he said.
When the House resumes sitting in late January after a winter break, Gould will be missing from the front bench as she takes her maternity leave.
Government whip Steve MacKinnon will become interim House leader, and Gould said she plans to vote for bills virtually and attend cabinet and caucus meetings by phone and video.
It's a decision she made after stretching herself too thin after having her first child in 2018 and taking just a nine-week break, which she said didn't allow enough time to physically and mentally recover.
"I was very focused on two things: doing my job as then-minister of democratic institutions and MP of Burlington, and being a mom," she said.
"I didn't have space for anything else in my life, including the fact that just before I gave birth, I lost my mom very suddenly to cancer, and there was a lot going on."
The ushering in of a hybrid Parliament in which MPs can vote virtually has since afforded her — and others like NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh — the opportunity to go on parental leave while still fulfilling some of their duties.
That's something she strongly advocated for, explaining that she sees it as part of her modus operandi to help break down barriers for women in politics.
Even if she may be less visible for a while, Gould said she has no intention to stop fighting.
"At the end of the day, it is an incredible privilege and honour to sit in that House in any seat, and I want Canadians to be proud of their democratic institutions," she said.
"And I want them to be proud of the people who serve there."
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 4, 2024.
Comments
This puff-piece neglects to mention Gould's shabby role in delivering Trudeau's 2017 betrayal on electoral reform: https://policyoptions.irpp.org/magazines/february-2017/broken-trust-on-….
If the Liberals get defeated by a majority PP government elected with 40% of the popular vote, it will serve them right. Pity about the country, though.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/wherry-trudeau-electoral-reform-promis…
"Pity about the country though?" The narcissism of small differences strikes again.
I submit this more balanced article that isn't loaded with the usual tribal hatred of the Liberal Party and Trudeau in particular that continues to split OUR progressive vote, even under the truly dangerous political circumstances we currently find ourselves in. Which we emphatically DO. Is that at least agreed on?! Probably not. Therein lies the problem.
At the recent NDP convention they were flexing their muscles again regarding "the agreement" with the Liberals as in should they continue with their largesse? Or should they not? Hmmm, probably NOT because we DO have some real power now, and are seriously chuffed by it. This major, petty tone-deafness despite "the agreement" objectively being a classic win-win, enabling more progressive policies for all Canadians (policies that the NDP vainly and irrationally claim as theirs and theirs alone, along with PR, despite the inherent fractiousness of that topic being on display, even in this comments section every single time it comes up), not to mention offering some desperately needed hope and respite for all of us progressives at this unprecedentedly difficult time.
This is the bottom line, we progressives must unite, and can no longer afford to indulge ANY coterie of "political values."
Trudeau shouldn't have "promised" the change at the outset but the criticism of not allowing ENOUGH consultation or discussion usually seems to stem from not getting the result that was wanted, something we keep hearing from the conservatives who are using it as an excuse to burn it all down. Trudeau's version of PR was of course dismissed because it would ensure Liberals winning but the fact that they are historically the natural governing party is a solid positive that many of us are clinging to right now.
Having to grapple with the "art of the possible" in this large, fractious country is a political reality the NDP has never actually had to deal with, and when it has even come close it has demonstrably "caved" as well.