Bill Blair resigns seat ahead of diplomatic appointment
Former defence minister will become Canada's high commissioner to the U.K.
Author of the article:Bryan Passifiume
Published Feb 02, 2026 • Last updated 10 hours ago • 3 minute read
Minister of National Defence Bill Blair talks to reporters in Brussels on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025.
Minister of National Defence Bill Blair talks to reporters in Brussels on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025. Photo by Sean Kilpatrick /The Canadian Press
OTTAWA — Another Justin Trudeau-era cabinet minister has given up his seat in the House of Commons for a diplomatic post.
The former defence minister Bill Blair announced on Monday he is resigning his seat Monday and will depart Ottawa for London to become Canada’s high commissioner to the United Kingdom.
Blair is set to replace former Liberal MP Ralph Goodale — the long-serving Saskatchewan MP who was named Canadian high commissioner to the U.K. by Trudeau in 2021.
“Serving the people of Scarborough Southwest as your member of Parliament has been an incredible privilege,” Blair said on social media on Monday. “Today, I’m stepping down to accept the appointment of high commissioner for Canada in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.”
Ex-Trudeau ministers pegged for diplomatic posts
Blair’s resignation came nearly a month after former Trudeau stalwart and deputy PM Chrystia Freeland resigned her seat to take a position as an unpaid economic adviser to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and become CEO of the Rhodes Trust.
Goodale, who returned home from the U.K. in December, is the subject of a scheduled fundraiser for the Regina—Wascana Federal Liberal Association, which is holding a “Welcome Home Pam and Ralph Goodale” reception at a convention centre in Regina on Feb. 21.
Suggestions that Blair may replace Goodale as Canada’s highest-ranking diplomat in the U.K. began swirling last year as government sources suggested three senior Trudeau-era cabinet ministers were being considered for vital diplomatic posts.
David Lametti — who famously replaced ousted Liberal cabinet minister Jody Wilson-Raybould as justice minister in 2019 — was named Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations by Prime Minister Mark Carney, replacing former Ontario premier Bob Rae late last year.
After resigning his seat in January 2024, Lametti spent a little over two months as Carney’s principal secretary before resigning in September after reportedly clashing with a fellow senior member of the Prime Minister’s Office.
Those same rumours also pegged former energy minister Jonathan Wilkinson as a candidate for another diplomatic post — rumoured to be either the European Union or Germany — but he remains a Liberal MP for now.
Former top cop-turned-politician
Blair’s political career began in 2015 after winning a seat for the Liberals in the riding of Scarborough Southwest.
Blair was instrumental in shaping Canada’s policy for the October 2018 legalization of cannabis and entered cabinet in 2019 as public safety Minister.
He was named president of the Privy Council in 2021, played a key role in Canada’s controversial response to the nationwide convoy protests and was named defence minister in 2023 — a position he held until May 2025.
Before entering politics, Blair spent a decade as Toronto’s chief of police, ending a nearly four-decade policing career in the city upon his retirement in 2015.
“I want to thank my constituents and local volunteers for their trust and support,” Blair said on X. “It has been an honour to be your voice in Parliament for the last decade and to work for all Canadians to build safer communities, protect our sovereignty and shape a better future.”
Blair also thanked Carney and Trudeau as well as those “working behind the scenes in Parliament” for their “commitment to public service. Our country is better for it.
“I’m deeply grateful for this chapter and I look forward to continuing to serve Canada and Canadians in this new capacity.”
bpassifiume@postmedia.com
Bill Blair has given up his seat in the House of Commons for a diplomatic post. Read more.
torontosun.com