
P.E.I.'s Liberal MPs promise to tackle key issues facing the Island
P.E.I. is once again painted red on the political map as all four of the province's federal ridings were won by Liberal candidates in Monday's federal election.
Three incumbents and one rookie will represent the Island in Ottawa, and all four say they're ready to get to work and address key challenges facing Islanders — from the cost of living to concerns in the fisheries and agriculture sectors.
Bobby Morrissey
Liberal incumbent Bobby Morrissey retained his seat in the Egmont riding after what looked like a tight race with Conservative candidate Logan McLellan after polls closed.
Heading into his fourth term, Morrissey said one of his top priorities is addressing growing concerns among his constituents on the future of P.E.I.'s wild oyster fishery.
Concerns about high oyster mortalities caused by the MSX parasite have fishers worried as the season is set to begin May 1. Industry members have been calling for urgent government action and support.
"Fishers are going to have to be looked after, and I'm going to go to bat for them," Morrissey told CBC's Island Morning.
While the Conservatives did not win any seats on P.E.I., they made significant gains in voter support, particularly in Egmont, where the race was tight at several points.
"That shows that people are paying attention here, and sometimes some people felt that the government that I was part of was not listening to them closely enough on some issues," he said, citing the oyster industry concerns.
"When certain segments of the population feel isolated from the government in power, then the government has to do a better job at listening."
Kent MacDonald
Rookie candidate Kent MacDonald will be the next MP in the eastern P.E.I. riding of Cardigan, the only district without an incumbent running after longtime MP Lawrence MacAulay retired.
MacDonald won more than 56 per cent of the vote.
Liberal candidate Kent MacDonald wins P.E.I.'s Cardigan riding by large margin
He said he feels ready to represent the people of Cardigan and the concerns he heard while campaigning.
"We have to keep working on affordability. There's certainly concerns in the fishing industry, around DFO and the regulations. Pricing is not great in the lobster industry. So all those things add up to frustration with the voters. I'll address them when I go to Ottawa," he said.
MacDonald, a dairy farmer from the Souris area, said he feels well positioned to stand up for Canada as the issue of supply management — which relies on the control of imports and enables the dairy, poultry and egg sectors to limit the supply of their products to what Canadians are expected to consume — once again comes under fire by U.S. President Donald Trump.
"My experience will bode well for me, having been involved in associations in the dairy industry, so governing will just be a bigger scale of those same activities," he said.
Sean Casey
Liberal incumbent Sean Casey will remain the member of Parliament for P.E.I.'s Charlottetown riding, having earned about 65 per cent of the vote in Monday's federal election.
Casey, who was first elected in 2011 and has represented the people of Charlottetown for the last four terms, said Islanders in the capital city are anxious about some of the same issues as the rest of Canada — affordability, access to health care, climate change, and ongoing tensions with the U.S.
"None of these things are going to be resolved overnight," Casey said
"But my sense is that Islanders, specifically, they get it that it isn't something that's going to happen overnight. They want to be reassured that there's a steady hand at the wheel and a methodical approach to each one of these problems."
With the Liberals under Mark Carney likely to form a minority government, Casey said collaboration with other parties will be key.
"I don't necessarily think that's a bad thing," he said. "I'm confident that with Prime Minister Carney, with the stated will of the electorate, that we will be able to get things done."
Heath MacDonald
Liberal incumbent Heath MacDonald will be going back to Ottawa as the MP for the central P.E.I. riding of Malpeque after securing about 57 per cent of the vote.
MacDonald said he looks forward to continuing to represent his constituents, also citing concerns about affordability, health care access and Trump's tariff threats as top priorities for his second term.
"People are certainly looking for political parties to restore some political stability, and people are tired of the rhetoric we've seen south of the border. I think people want us to work together for the betterment of Canada and, of course, Islanders as well," MacDonald said.
Reflecting on his first term, MacDonald said the learning curve was steep as he had a lot to learn about Parliament's protocols and procedures as well as building networks, but this time, he's already familiar with the procedures and relationships needed to get things done.
When asked whether he believes P.E.I. should have a seat at the cabinet table, given that former Cardigan MP Lawrence MacAulay held ministerial positions under the Trudeau government, MacDonald said he believes the province deserves representation in cabinet.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBC
2 hours ago
- CBC
Surrey rallies public support in bid for South Asian heritage museum
The City of Surrey is on a mission to become the home of B.C.'s new South Asian heritage museum. The city has launched an online petition to gather public support. CBC's Sohrab Sandhu spoke with some residents who support the demand.


Toronto Sun
10 hours ago
- Toronto Sun
Toronto MP Baber calls out Mayor Chow, 'outright crazy' shelter plan
After a combative appearance at a city hall committee, the York Centre MP is urging 'any Toronto city councillor with any decency to please, stand up to' Mayor Olivia Chow. Conservative Party of Canada leadership hopeful Roman Baber takes part in a debate at the Canada Strong and Free Networking Conference in Ottawa May 5, 2022. REUTERS/Blair Gable Roman Baber started by saying he came 'humbly' and 'respectfully.' Later, the Conservative MP let them know what he truly thought. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account 'Children will be picking up needles. This is on you. You have not consulted any of us,' the representative for York Centre told City Hall's planning and housing committee. Those words concluded Baber's brief remarks at the committee, which were repeatedly derailed by Councillor Gord Perks' insistence there were things the MP could and could not say. Much as other Torontonians hear at City Hall committees these days, Perks, the committee chairman, said certain subjects aren't up for debate – and if Baber didn't comply, 'I will ask you to leave.' Baber told Perks, one policy-maker to another, that a discussion about zoning should clearly allow opposing a proposed land use – in this case, a homeless shelter at 1220 Wilson Ave., near Keele St. The committee didn't vote Baber's way. He says the fight's not done. 'I will do everything possible to get the plans for this shelter terminated or abandoned,' Baber told The Toronto Sun . 'I call on any Toronto city councillor with any decency to please, stand up to this mayor and the destructionist policies that she is unleashing on this city, and protect Downsview residents from the Downsview homeless shelter.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. City of Toronto process has become a disgrace! Watch vicious Councillor @gordperks trying to shut down debate on the homeless shelter, but I get him at the end. This isn't over. See Baber v Perks (edited). Full clip in thread. — Roman Baber (@Roman_Baber) July 16, 2025 That site on Wilson Ave. has received its share of scrutiny, as James Pasternak, the ward's councillor, has fought very publicly against it. While City Hall's aggressive rollout of shelters across Toronto appears to be growing into a major political issue, Baber said the Wilson site is 'particularly ill-conceived,' sitting between Pierre Laporte Middle School and a daycare centre. He also worries it's too close to a shelter near Jane St. — at 1677 Wilson Ave. — which was the scene of a stabbing murder last month. Pasternak told the Sun that operation is 'a case study in how a shelter comes off the rails,' lacking in day programming and essential supports. Recommended video Baber acknowledged there is an 'unprecedented challenge' – a recent city report said homelessness has doubled since 2021. He said the solution is to find 'suitable buildings in employment lands' and retrofit them. Your noon-hour look at what's happening in Toronto and beyond. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. Please try again This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'It seems, for lack of a better description, outright crazy to me that Toronto city council would agree to place a homeless shelter between a daycare centre and a middle school,' Baber said. 'We now know, regretfully, that Toronto city shelters are handing out drug paraphernalia to their residents,' Baber added. 'The Toronto homeless shelters are no longer just homeless shelters. They have turned into satellites for the so-called drug-injection sites.' (In a statement, the City of Toronto said the new shelters 'will not be safe consumption sites or offer safe consumption services,' but will 'provide health services' as defined in the city's shelter standards, which includes giving out 'safer drug use equipment.') This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Toronto city councillor Gord Perks is seen at an executive committee meeting on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. Photo by Jack Boland/Toronto Sun files Recent council debates have touched on an argument that attempts to debate proposed shelter sites politicize the process, as they're picked by unelected bureaucrats. Baber called that a 'complete abdication of responsibility by Toronto city council, which must know that needles from the drug-injection site will end up in the middle school and the daycare next door.' If city councillors think he won't fight, they don't know Baber. A lawyer by trade, Baber was born in the Soviet Union and immigrated to Canada as a teen. A couple of decades after, York Centre made him its MPP, in 2018. When he spoke out against the Ontario PCs' COVID policies, they booted him from caucus. When, as an Independent MPP, he urged the lockdown lawmakers to try living on what a CERB recipient made, they made a spectacle in the legislature by voting to lower Baber's salary only. (The move didn't stick as MPP salaries can't be changed in that way.) This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Baber's response? He ran for the federal Conservatives, and won, becoming Toronto's only current Tory MP. 'I don't agree with all his messaging, but I will say that he's fully entitled to speak out. This is the area he represents,' Pasternak said. 'Say what you want, homelessness touches on federal jurisdiction.' (Baber said he sees Pasternak as a colleague and a friend.) Baber's introduction to Toronto city politics last Tuesday included a short speech, just after his committee clash, at an outdoor press conference that was crashed by left-wing demonstrators and referred to in some news reports as a 'protest.' 'You'd think that when you have a CBC, CTV and Global News microphone in your face that you're not protesting,' Baber said. 'Of course, the other folks on the other side of this issue have tried to shut us down, just like Gord Perks tries to shut you down inside City Hall.' This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. York Centre MP Roman Baber points to Pierre Laporte Middle School, mere metres from the site of a planned homeless shelter, on a map during a group press conference on July 15, 2025, at Nathan Phillips Square in Toronto. Photo by Justin Holmes/Toronto Sun Baber was just the first of dozens of people who spoke about the shelters issue at Tuesday's committee meeting. Pasternak was also in attendance. 'I must admit I lost my temper at one point where I accused the chair of muzzling our constituents. I thought the meeting was a fiasco,' Pasternak said. At one point, committee members Jamaal Myers, Josh Matlow and Brad Bradford pressed Perks on why citizens weren't allowed to discuss the six sites in question being used as homeless shelters. 'The report mentions shelters multiple times … but the deputants are not allowed to talk about shelters,' Myers said. Bradford pushed harder. 'I know you want to keep that in a very tight little box today, but that's probably not why 80 people took their time to be here and provide feedback to this committee today,' Bradford said, to cheers from waiting speakers. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. Baber said he was disappointed the committee voted 4-2 against a motion to quash the zoning change for 1220 Wilson, and was 'surprised that Councillor Frances Nunziata specifically, who typically tends to be good on this issue, decided to vote with Gord Perks and Mayor Olivia Chow.' Pasternak said his preference remains to set up a shelter not at the Wilson site but at the nearby Humber River Hospital. Baber said he'll continue to lobby against the Wilson plan, and perhaps push for the project to be defunded or for the province to intervene. 'I will not rest,' Baber said, 'until I know that the Downsview shelter is no longer in the works.' jholmes@ Read More Toronto & GTA Editorial Cartoons Toronto & GTA World Toronto Blue Jays


CTV News
11 hours ago
- CTV News
Japan's governing coalition loses upper house election
Voters fill in their ballots in the upper house election at a polling station Sunday, July 20, 2025, in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko) TOKYO — Japanese Prime Minister Shigeru Ishiba's ruling coalition failed to secure a majority in the 248-seat upper house in a crucial parliamentary election, Japan's NHK public television said Monday. Ishiba's Liberal Democratic Party and its junior coalition partner Komeito needed to win 50 seats on top of the 75 seats they already have to reach the goal. With two more seats to be decided, the coalition had only 46 seats. The loss is another blow to Ishiba's coalition, making it a minority in both houses following its October defeat in the lower house election, and worsening Japan's political instability. It was the first time the LDP has lost a majority in both houses of parliament since the party's foundation in 1955. Ishiba on Sunday expressed determination to stay on to tackle challenges such as U.S. tariff threats, but he could face calls from within his party to step down or find another coalition partner. Mari Yamaguchi, The Associated Press Reeno Hashimoto contributed to this report.