Navdeep Bains
Navdeep Singh Bains PC FCPA MP (Punjabi: ਨਵਦੀਪ ਸਿੰਘ ਬੈਨਸ; born June 16, 1977) is a Canadian politician who served as Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry from 2019 until 2021. A member of the Liberal Party of Canada, he has represented the riding of Mississauga—Malton in the House of Commons since the 2015 election. He previously represented the riding of Mississauga—Brampton South from 2004 to 2011. On November 4, 2015, he was appointed the Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development in the 29th Canadian Ministry. Bains announced that he would retire from politics after the next federal election, and resigned from the Cabinet effective January 12, 2021.[1]
Navdeep Bains | |
---|---|
ਨਵਦੀਪ ਬੈਨਸ | |
Minister of Innovation, Science and Industry Registrar General of Canada | |
In office November 4, 2015 – January 12, 2021 | |
Prime Minister | Justin Trudeau |
Preceded by | James Moore |
Succeeded by | François-Philipe Champagne |
Member of the Canadian Parliament for Mississauga—Malton | |
Assumed office October 19, 2015 | |
Preceded by | Riding established |
Member of the Canadian Parliament for Mississauga—Brampton South | |
In office June 28, 2004 – May 2, 2011 | |
Preceded by | Riding established |
Succeeded by | Eve Adams |
Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister of Canada | |
In office October 7, 2005 – November 29, 2005 | |
Prime Minister | Paul Martin |
Succeeded by | Jason Kenney |
Personal details | |
Born | Navdeep Singh Bains June 16, 1977 Toronto, Ontario, Canada |
Political party | Liberal |
Spouse(s) | Brahamjot Bains |
Residence | Mississauga, Ontario, Canada |
Profession | Certified management accountant, financial analyst |
Early life and career
Bains was born in Toronto, Ontario on June 16, 1977 to Harminder and Balwinder Bains, entrepreneurial Indian Sikh immigrant parents.[2][3]
Bains graduated from Turner Fenton Secondary School in Brampton,[4] while it was known as J. A. Turner Secondary School and Turner Fenton Campus.[5] After completing high school, Bains attended York University, where he received his Bachelor of Administrative Studies.[6] He then went on to finish his Masters in Business Administration from the University of Windsor.[6] He received his Certified Management Accountant designation, subsequently becoming a Chartered Professional Accountant in 2014.[3] In 2016, he was awarded the prestigious FCPA designation by CPA Ontario for his “outstanding achievements including community leadership”.[7]
Bains worked as a financial processing analyst at Nike Canada from 2000 to 2001.[8] He also worked for the Ford Motor Company as a revenue and costing analyst from 2000 until 2004.[9]
Political career
38th Parliament
In his first election in 2004, Bains won the Liberal nomination for the riding of Mississauga—Brampton South, and won the seat with over 57% of the total vote; beating his next nearest opponent by over 33%, or over 14,000 votes.[10] At that time, Bains was 26 years old and the youngest Liberal MP in Parliament.[11]
Bains was elected chair of the Subcommittee on Human Rights and International Development of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade in April 2005, and held it until October 7, 2005, when he became Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister, which at the time was Paul Martin.[12] As Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister, Bains was sworn in as a Privy Councillor, and served until February 5, 2006, the day before the Conservative government of Stephen Harper was sworn in after the 2006 federal election.[3][13]
In October 2005, Bains also became a member of the Red Ribbon Task Force that released a 2006 report on revitalizing the party organization.[14]
In opposition
In 2006, Bains was re-elected in his riding with just under 54% of the vote.[15]
Also in 2006, Bains co-chaired the Liberal Party of Canada (Ontario)'s annual general meeting Toronto.[16] Because of his position in the Party and the roles he has been given, Bains was seen as a rising star, and had been selected three years in a row in the Hill Times survey as the best up and comer.[17]
During the 2006 Liberal leadership convention to replace Paul Martin, Bains threw his support behind Ontario Education Minister Gerard Kennedy, and after Kennedy dropped out before the third ballot, he joined Kennedy in supporting the eventual winner and new party leader, Stéphane Dion.[18]
In the 39th Parliament, Bains held Official Opposition critic portfolios for Public Works and Government Services, the Treasury Board and International Trade, respectively.[3] Bains was also member of the Liberal Caucus Committees for Planning and Priorities, Canada and the World and Economic Prosperity.[19] In January 2007, he was appointed to the National Election Readiness Committee as a Caucus Representative and in March 2007 served as the Youth Liaison to the Young Liberals of Canada.[19]
In January 2009, he was selected by Michael Ignatieff along with Steve MacKinnon to serve as Co-Chairs of the Special Committee on Party Renewal and tasked with heading a consultation process with the party membership on how to strengthen the party.[19][20] In March 2009, Bains was appointed Chair of Platform Development and oversaw the creation of the party's next electoral platform.[19] As part of his recommendations for party renewal, delegates at the 2009 Liberal leadership election voted to ensure that all future leadership elections would be under a “weighted one member, one vote” system, where each riding has 100 points that are distributed to leadership candidates based on the percentage of votes from party members in that riding.[18]
During the 40th Parliament, Bains held Official Opposition critic portfolios for Natural Resources and Small Business and Tourism.[3]
In January 2011, Bains claimed that the Bloc Québécois was using "the politics of fear" and argued against their attempt to ban the ceremonial Sikh kirpan from the parliamentary buildings after an incident in which the Quebec National Assembly denied entry to a group of four kirpan-wearing Sikhs.[21][22]
Out of Parliament
In the 2011 federal election, Eve Adams, a former Mississauga City Councillor, beat Bains by over 5,000 votes.[23]
Bains was a director of the Municipal Property Assessment Corporation from September 2012 to September 2015.[24] He also served on the Ontario Provincial Board of the Heart and Stroke Foundation, including a stint as Vice Chair starting December 2014.[25] Bains is also on the board of advisors for the Pearson Centre for Progressive Policy.[26]
Bains also entered academia and became an adjunct lecturer in a Master of Public Service program at the University of Waterloo and a distinguished visiting professor at the Ted Rogers School of Management at Ryerson University, starting in 2013 for a one-year term.[6][27] His teaching contract at Ryerson was extended, and he was still a professor at the time of his re-election in 2015.[28]
Bains was touted as a possible candidate in the 2014 municipal election in Brampton and was included in January 2014 polling alongside candidates like Susan Fennell and John Sanderson in which he finished third among voters polled.[29] Provincial Liberal Linda Jeffrey subsequently ran for mayor and won.[30]
Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development
Bains was the Ontario co-chair for the federal Liberal campaign, and was returned to the House of Commons in the 2015 federal election in the new riding of Mississauga—Malton.[28][31] On November 4, 2015, he was appointed the Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development in Justin Trudeau's cabinet.[32] The next day, Bains announced that the mandatory long form census would be restored for 2016, after it was removed from the 2011 edition under the Harper government.[33] Under Bains’ leadership, the 2016 Census response rate exceeded 98 percent, making it the most successful Census since 1666.[34]
Bains is also the Registrar General of Canada, responsible for registering all letters patent, commissions, instruments, proclamations and any other documents that may, from time to time, be issued under the Great Seal of Canada.
A major focus of Bains’ mandate is to spur innovation and economic development in Canada. Following public consultations across Canada in the summer of 2016, he launched the Inclusive Innovation Agenda. Based on the consultations, the Bains identified three priority areas for Canada's Innovation Agenda: finding better ways for more Canadians to get the skills the global economy demands (People), harnessing emerging tech that would create industries and jobs that never existed before as well as reinvigorate existing ones (Technology), and encouraging more Canadians to start and grow companies that are competitive in the global economy (Companies).[35][36]
His portfolio also includes responsibility for the six regional development agencies across Canada: Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA); Canada Economic Development for Quebec Regions (CED); Canadian Northern Economic Development Agency (CanNor); Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario (FedDev Ontario); Federal Economic Development Initiative for Northern Ontario (FedNor); Western Economic Diversification Canada (WD).[37]
In December 2016, he also launched Connect to Innovate, a program that will invest $500 million to bring high-speed Internet to rural and remote communities across Canada.[38] In 2018, Bains announced $950 million for a variety of national superclusters of innovation across the country.[39] To date, Minister Bains has supported 37 projects, investing $389 million, leading to nearly $4.1 billion in total investments in the automotive sector. Bains locked in the manufacturing of the C-Series in Montréal, protecting 6,000 direct jobs in Ontario and Québec in the aerospace industry. He also launched Canada's first-ever Intellectual Property Strategy.
Bains worked closely with the Advisory Council on Economic Growth, which advised the Canadian Finance Minister on economic policies to achieve long-term sustainable growth. The Council called for a gradual increase in permanent immigration to Canada to 450,000 people a year.[40][41]
The Hill Times featured Bains on the cover of their Power & Influence magazine in 2017. Dubbed the ‘Minister of Everything’ in the article, he was ranked 4th most influential, behind Justin Trudeau, Katie Telford and Gerald Butts.[42] On April 7, 2017, CFIB's Executive Vice-President and Chief Strategic Officer Laura Jones[43] presented Minister Bains with a Golden Scissors Award"[44] as a symbolic gesture of cutting through red tape shortly after Bains announced the interprovincial legislation entitled the Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CFTA). He is a recipient of Startup Canada's Policy Prize (2017). In 2017, Bains was listed in the Globe and Mail's The Power 50.[45] He is featured as the second influencer on the 2018 Bay Street Bull Power 50 list,[46] and Apolitical listed him among the World's 100 Most Influential People in Digital Government.[47]
In 2019, Minister Bains announced Canada's Digital Charter.[48]
In August 2020, amidst a review of an August 2019 decision by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission to reduce capacity rates by up to 43% and access rates up to 77%, Bains released a statement saying that the government shared the fears of Canada's big telecommunication corporations that it went too far and would disincentivize investment in communication networks, especially less profitable rural and remote areas. However, the statement also said that the government would not formally intervene in the ongoing review.[49]
Legislation
Bains introduced legislation to amend the Copyright Act with respect to improving access to works by persons with a perceptual disability, which subsequently received Royal Assent in June 2016,[50] thus enabling Canada to become the key 20th nation to accede to the Marrakesh Treaty, bringing the Treaty into force on September 30, 2016.[51] He also put forward bill C-25, proposing to amend federal corporate law to promote corporate transparency and increase diversity on corporate boards.[52] In particular, the bill focuses on the participation of women on corporate boards, as well as on senior management teams. In the same Parliamentary session, Bains introduced bill C-36, intended to enhance, reinforce and protect the independence of Statistics Canada, fulfilling a campaign promise from the Liberals 2015 election platform.[53] In June 2018, both bills C-25 and C-36 received Royal Assent.
Personal life
Bains currently resides in Peel with his wife, Brahamjot, with whom he has two daughters, Nanki Kaur and Kirpa Kaur.[2][4][54]
Electoral results
2019 Canadian federal election: Mississauga—Malton | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Liberal | Navdeep Bains | 27,890 | 57.5 | |||||
Conservative | Tom Varughese | 12,528 | 25.8 | |||||
New Democratic | Nikki Clarke | 6,103 | 12.6 | |||||
Green | Christina Porter | 1,251 | 2.6 | |||||
People's | Tahir Gora | 369 | 0.8 | |||||
United | Prudence Buchanan | 306 | 0.6 | |||||
Marxist–Leninist | Frank Chilelli | 90 | 0.2 | |||||
Total valid votes/Expense limit | 48,537 | 100.0 | ||||||
Total rejected ballots | 500 | |||||||
Turnout | 49,037 | 62.0 | ||||||
Eligible voters | 79,034 | |||||||
Source: Elections Canada[55][56] |
2015 Canadian federal election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Liberal | Navdeep Bains | 26,165 | 59.12 | +22.33 | $103,144.90 | |||
Conservative | Jagdish Grewal[57] | 11,701 | 26.44 | -11.00 | $126,893.52 | |||
New Democratic | Dianne Douglas | 5,450 | 12.31 | -11.12 | $5,226.05 | |||
Green | Heather Mercer | 737 | 1.67 | -0.37 | – | |||
Independent | Naresh Tharani | 210 | 0.46 | – | $8,153.79 | |||
Total valid votes/Expense limit | 44,256 | 100.00 | $207,082.35 | |||||
Total rejected ballots | 237 | 0.53 | – | |||||
Turnout | 44,493 | 59.76 | – | |||||
Eligible voters | 74,448 | |||||||
Liberal notional gain from Conservative | Swing | +16.67 | ||||||
Source: Elections Canada[58][59] |
2011 Canadian federal election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | |||||
Conservative | Eve Adams | 23,632 | 44.72 | |||||
Liberal | Navdeep Bains | 18,579 | 35.16 | |||||
New Democratic | Jim Glavan | 9,465 | 17.91 | |||||
Green | Benjamin Stone | 1,044 | 1.98 | |||||
Marxist–Leninist | Tim Sullivan | 127 | 0.24 | |||||
Total valid votes | 52,847 | 100.00 | ||||||
Total rejected ballots | 351 | 0.66 | ||||||
Turnout | 53,198 | 57.27 | ||||||
Eligible voters | 92,890 | – |
2008 Canadian federal election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Liberal | Navdeep Bains | 21,220 | 47.69 | -6.25 | $ 65,107.35 | |||
Conservative | Salma Ataullahjan | 14,664 | 32.96 | +2.21 | 51,467.58 | |||
New Democratic | Karan Pandher | 5,268 | 11.84 | +0.96 | 5,832.24 | |||
Green | Grace Yogaretnam | 2,947 | 6.62 | +2.82 | 5,666.20 | |||
Marxist–Leninist | Tim Sullivan | 395 | 0.89 | +0.26 | ||||
Total valid votes/Expense limit | 44,494 | 100.00 | -12.31 | $ 91,776.94 | ||||
Total rejected ballots | 343 | 0.76 | +0.15 | |||||
Turnout | 44,837 | 49.39 | -10.62 | |||||
Eligible voters | 90,777 | +6.71 |
2006 Canadian federal election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Liberal | Navdeep Bains | 27,370 | 53.94 | -3.22 | $ 80,611.34 | |||
Conservative | Arnjeet Sangha | 15,605 | 30.75 | +6.66 | 58,602.08 | |||
New Democratic | Nirvan Balkisoon | 5,521 | 10.88 | -3.92 | 9,470.07 | |||
Green | Grace Yogaretnam | 1,927 | 3.80 | +0.28 | 7,606.18 | |||
Marxist–Leninist | Tim Sullivan | 319 | 0.63 | +0.20 | ||||
Total valid votes/Expense limit | 50,742 | 100.00 | +17.17 | $ 82,924.57 | ||||
Total rejected ballots | 310 | 0.61 | -0.13 | |||||
Turnout | 51,052 | 60.01 | +6.17 | |||||
Eligible voters | 85,068 | +4.97 |
2004 Canadian federal election | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | Expenditures | ||||
Liberal | Navdeep Bains | 24,753 | 57.16 | $ 70,830.08 | ||||
Conservative | Parvinder Sandhu | 10,433 | 24.09 | 64,050.50 | ||||
New Democratic | Larry Taylor | 6,411 | 14.80 | 14,516.24 | ||||
Green | Paul Simas | 1,525 | 3.52 | |||||
Marxist–Leninist | David Gershuny | 185 | 0.43 | 23.48 | ||||
Total valid votes/Expense limit | 43,307 | 100.00 | $ 78,421.35 | |||||
Total rejected ballots | 321 | 0.74 | ||||||
Turnout | 43,628 | 53.84 | ||||||
Eligible voters | 81,037 |
References
- https://www.ctvnews.ca/politics/pm-to-shuffle-cabinet-with-navdeep-bains-retiring-from-politics-1.5262884
- Taber, Jane (1 December 2006). "Family blocs offer convention support". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 5 November 2015.
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- Grewal, San (29 April 2014). "Poll finds Brampton Mayor Susan Fennell a distant third". Toronto Star. Toronto ON. p. GT2. Retrieved 29 April 2014.
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- "Influential Liberal advisers want Canadian population to triple by 2100". Global News. October 23, 2016. Archived from the original on September 27, 2019. Retrieved September 24, 2020.
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- An Act to amend the Copyright Act (access to copyrighted works or other subject-matter for persons with perceptual disabilities), S.C. 2016, c. 4
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- "Elections Canada – Preliminary Election Expenses Limits for Candidates". Archived from the original on 2015-08-15. Retrieved 2020-11-17.
External links
- Official website
- Bio & mandate from the Prime Minister
- Navdeep Bains – Parliament of Canada biography
29th Ministry – Cabinet of Justin Trudeau | ||
Cabinet post (1) | ||
---|---|---|
Predecessor | Office | Successor |
James Moore | Minister of Innovation, Science and Economic Development November 4, 2015 – January 12, 2021 |
François-Philippe Champagne |
Parliament of Canada | ||
New constituency | Member of Parliament for Mississauga—Malton October 19, 2015 – present |
Incumbent |
New constituency | Member of Parliament for Mississauga—Brampton South June 28, 2004 – May 2, 2011 |
Succeeded by Eve Adams |