Smith ministry

Cabinet of Alberta since 2022 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Smith ministry is the combined Cabinet (formally the Executive Council of Alberta), chaired by 19th Premier of Alberta Danielle Smith, that has governed Alberta since October 11, 2022. The Cabinet consists of members of the United Conservative Party, which holds a majority of the seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.

Quick facts Date formed, People and organisations ...
Smith ministry

19th ministry of Alberta
Danielle Smith in 2014
Date formedOctober 11, 2022 (2022-10-11)
People and organisations
MonarchCharles III
Lieutenant GovernorSalma Lakhani
PremierDanielle Smith
Premier's historyPremiership of Danielle Smith
Member partyUnited Conservative Party
Status in legislatureMajority
Opposition partyNew Democratic Party
Opposition leader
History
Election2023
Legislature terms
Incoming formation2022 United Conservative Party leadership election
PredecessorKenney Ministry
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The Smith Ministry replaced the Kenney Ministry, following the 2022 United Conservative Party leadership election.[1]

Cabinet composition

Initial Cabinet (October 2022–June 2023)

On October 21, 2022, Smith's inaugural cabinet was sworn in. It consisted of 25 ministers,[2] the largest for a new premier's Cabinet in Alberta's history, an increase over Jason Kenney's initial Cabinet of 23 ministers.[3] Five of the six rivals that Smith faced for the leadership were included in cabinet: Travis Toews was named finance minister; Brian Jean was appointed to a revamped ministry of jobs, economy and northern development; Todd Loewen headed a newly combined ministry of forestry, parks and tourism; Rebecca Schulz gained municipal affairs; and Rajan Sawhney took the ministry of trade, immigration and multiculturalism. Leela Aheer, who placed seventh, did not join cabinet. Adriana LaGrange, Demetrios Nicolaides and Tyler Shandro retained their portfolios from the Kenney Ministry, while Tanya Fir, Whitney Issik, Ric McIver, Jason Nixon and Prasad Panda were dropped entirely. The labour and housing ministries were eliminated. The number of female cabinet ministers dropped from eight to five.[4]

Post-2023 election Cabinet shuffle (June 2023–May 2025)

On June 9, 2023, Smith shuffled her cabinet following the May 2023 election, which returned a smaller United Conservative Party majority government. Incumbent ministers Kaycee Madu, Nicholas Milliken, Jeremy Nixon, Jason Copping, Josephine Pon, Jason Luan, and Tyler Shandro were defeated in the election. Among the changes in the shuffle, Nate Horner was appointed the new minister of finance, Mickey Amery the new justice minister, and Mike Ellis was named deputy premier. Amery was the first Muslim to be justice minister. RJ Sigurdson, Searle Turton and Dan Williams joined cabinet for the first time, while Fir, McIver and Muhammad Yaseen returned to cabinet. The number of women ministers remained stable at five.[5][6]

On February 25, 2025, Peter Guthrie resigned as Minister of Infrastructure, citing concerns over the government's procurement practices.[7]

2025 Cabinet shuffle (May 2025–present)

On May 13, 2025, Municipal Affairs Minister Ric McIver resigned and was subsequently elected Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.[8]

On May 16, 2025, Smith announced a cabinet shuffle. The cabinet totalled 25 ministers, two associate ministers and eight parliamentary secretaries in a non-cabinet role. Myles McDougall was appointed Minister of Advanced Education, Rajan Sawhney as Minister of Indigenous Relations, and Joseph Schow overseeing Jobs, Economy, Trade and Immigration. Rick Wilson assumed the Mental Health and Addiction portfolio, Dan Williams became Minister of Municipal Affairs, and Andrew Boitchenko took on Tourism and Sport. The Ministry of Health was split, with Matt Jones taking on Hospital and Surgical Health Services and Adriana LaGrange was named Minister of Primary and Preventive Health Services. Two titles were adjusted, with Demetrios Nicolaides named the Minister of Education and Childcare and Jason Nixon named Minister of Assisted Living and Social Services.[9][10]

List of ministers

More information Portfolio, Minister ...
Smith ministry by portfolio
Portfolio Minister Tenure
Start End
Premier of Alberta Danielle Smith October 11, 2022 Present
Deputy Premier of Alberta Kaycee Madu October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Nathan Neudorf October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Mike Ellis June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Advanced Education Demetrios Nicolaides October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Rajan Sawhney June 9, 2023 May 16, 2025
Myles McDougall May 16, 2025 Present
Minister of Affordability and Utilities Matt Jones October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Nathan Neudorf June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Agriculture and Irrigation Nate Horner October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
RJ Sigurdson June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Children and Family Services[a] Mickey Amery October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Searle Turton June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Arts, Culture and Status of Women[b] Jason Luan October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Tanya Fir June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Education and Childcare[c] Adriana LaGrange October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Demetrios Nicolaides June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Energy and Minerals[d] Peter Guthrie October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Brian Jean June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Environment and Protected Areas Sonya Savage October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Rebecca Schulz June 9, 2023 January 2, 2026
Grant Hunter January 2, 2026[11] Present
Minister of Finance and President of Treasury Board Travis Toews October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Nate Horner June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Forestry and Parks[e] Todd Loewen October 21, 2022 Present
Minister of Health Jason Copping October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Adriana LaGrange June 9, 2023 May 16, 2025[f]
Minister of Hospital and Surgical Health Services Matt Jones May 16, 2025[f] Present
Minister of Primary and Preventive Health Services Adriana LaGrange May 16, 2025[f] Present
Minister of Indigenous Relations Rick Wilson October 21, 2022 May 16, 2025
Rajan Sawhney May 16, 2025 Present
Minister of Infrastructure Peter Guthrie June 9, 2023 February 25, 2025
Martin Long[12] February 27, 2025 Present
Minister of Jobs, Economy and Trade[g] Brian Jean October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Matt Jones June 9, 2023 May 16, 2025
Joseph Schow May 16, 2025 Present
Minister of Justice Tyler Shandro October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Mickey Amery June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Mental Health and Addictions Nicholas Milliken October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Dan Williams June 9, 2023 May 16, 2025
Rick Wilson May 16, 2025 Present
Minister of Municipal Affairs Rebecca Schulz October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Ric McIver June 9, 2023 May 13, 2025
Dan Williams May 16, 2025 Present
Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Services[h] Mike Ellis October 21, 2022 Present
Minister of Assisted Living and Social Services[i] Jeremy Nixon October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Jason Nixon June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Service Alberta and Red Tape Reduction Dale Nally October 21, 2022 Present
Minister of Technology and Innovation Nate Glubish October 21, 2022 Present
Minister of Tourism and Sport Joseph Schow June 9, 2023 May 16, 2025
Andrew Boitchenko May 16, 2025 Present
Minister of Immigration and Multiculturalism[j] Rajan Sawhney October 21, 2022 June 9, 2023
Muhammad Yaseen June 9, 2023 Present
Minister of Transportation and Economic Corridors Devin Dreeshen October 21, 2022 Present
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Notes

  1. "Children's Services" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023.
  2. "Culture" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023.
  3. "Education" until May 16, 2025
  4. "Energy" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023
  5. "Forestry, Parks and Tourism" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023.
  6. "Health" split into "Hospital and Surgical Health Services" and "Primary and Preventive Health Services"
  7. "Jobs, Economy and Northern Development" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023.
  8. "Public Safety" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023.
  9. "Seniors, Community and Social Services" until May 16, 2025
  10. "Trade, Immigration and Multiculturalism" from October 11, 2022, to June 9, 2023.

See also

References

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