Skip to content

B.C. Premier David Eby leans on Ravi Kahlon again as he reshuffles cabinet

b52a7a58e14c467dab162ff7fd05cc389bb48e921300ba1ad811113154a1226a
B.C. Premier David Eby pauses to look at his notes during an announcement at Electronic Arts in Burnaby, B.C., on Monday, July 7, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

VICTORIA — B.C. Premier David Eby has leaned on Ravi Kahlon from the moment Eby officially sought the government's top job, with Kahlon co-chairing his leadership campaign.

When Eby created the province's stand-alone housing ministry in 2022, he asked Kahlon to head it, and when U.S. President Donald Trump launched his trade war on Canada this year, it was Kahlon who Eby picked to chair the cabinet committee on B.C.'s response.

Kahlon remains at the centre of Eby's NDP government after Thursday's cabinet reshuffle, with Eby saying he "needed Ravi" back in the jobs and economic growth ministry, a portfolio he previously headed.

"We have many sectors under direct threat by the United States," Eby said at the unveiling of his revamped team.

"We have to transition very quickly. He (Kahlon) is bringing deep relationships with the business community, deep experience in government policy. He has been doing a lot of work with our tariff committee, and I'm very thrilled that he's agreed to take that on."

Eby said the reshuffle strategically matched caucus members with different roles to help B.C. weather an economic storm, that the premier said would get worse.

Kahlon, a former Canadian Olympic field hockey player, replaces Diana Gibson, who replaces George Chow as minister for citizens' services.

Eby disputed that Gibson's move was a demotion, and that Kahlon's high-profile roles show that the premier only trusts a limited number of individuals.

"We have a very deep bench," Eby said. "We have a remarkable cabinet team, and like a manager or coach of a sports team, when you are facing a particular opponent or a particular moment, you might have to shift some players to ensure that the skills that they bring to the table are meeting the moment for the whole team, and that is what is happening here," he said.

Kahlon welcomed taking on a familiar role.

"There is a lot that has happened last year," Kahlon said of the trade war and Trump's annexation threats.

Gibson retains a senior cabinet portfolio, but not everyone fared as well.

Garry Begg loses his post as public safety minister and solicitor general to Nina Krieger, who previously served as parliamentary secretary for arts and film.

Begg will now serve as parliamentary secretary for Surrey infrastructure, which Eby also said was not a demotion.

Eby said Begg did an "exceptional job" managing Surrey's transition from the RCMP to its own police force.

"This is about matching skills to the moment that we face," Eby said. "We are in a moment, in our province, where significant cultural and religious communities feel under profound threat, because of rising racism … because of violent protest and threats directed at places of worship in our province, and in at least one case, arson at a synagogue."

Eby said Krieger would bring what he called an "incredible background working with communities" to her new role.

Krieger, who is Jewish, previously served as executive director of the Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre. She represents a Victoria riding and said she was familiar with the city's disorder problems.

"(I) have close working relationships with mayor, with council, and also with business owners and residents, that feel all-too-often unsafe in our downtown core," she said.

But she acknowledged that she will have to do some catch-up work.

Krieger is one of two new faces around the senior cabinet table, the other being Surrey-area MLA Jessie Sunner. She is the new minister of post-secondary education and future skills, replacing Anne Kang, who moves to tourism, arts, culture and sport.

Former Vancouver councillor Christine Boyle, meanwhile, will take on Kahlon's former housing portfolio.

Asked whether Boyle's appointment would interrupt any momentum on the housing file made under Kahlon, Eby said Boyle would have to deal with "big changes" in the Canadian condo market. B.C. still needs "significant additional new housing" to respond to population growth, he said.

Uncertainty created by the trade war had only "amplified" various transitions in the housing market, Eby added.

"There's an important piece of work for the new minister to take on here," Eby said. "The good news is that Minister Kahlon is still around the table, that he will be supporting the minister in the work that is to come and facilitating a quick and effective transition."

HOW THE B.C. RESHUFFLE LOOKS

Jobs and Economic Growth: Ravi Kahlon in, Diana Gibson out

Public Safety and Solicitor General: Nina Krieger in, Garry Begg out

Post Secondary Education and Future Skills: Jessie Sunner in, Anne Kang out

Housing and Municipal Affairs: Christine Boyle in, Ravi Kahlon out

Citizens' Services: Diana Gibson in, George Chow out

Tourism, Arts, Culture and Sport: Anne Kang in, Spencer Chandra-Herbert out

Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation: Spencer Chandra-Herbert in, Christine Boyle out

Minister of State for AI and New Technologies (new role): Rick Glumac in

This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 17, 2025.

Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks