Minister of Canadian Heritage

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The minister of Canadian heritage is the minister of the Crown who heads Canadian Heritage, the department of the Government of Canada responsible for culture, media, sports, and the arts.

History

The position was created in 1996 to combine the posts of minister of multiculturalism and citizenship and minister of communications. The "status of women" was merged from the minister responsible for the status of women in 2006. In 2008, the status of women portfolio was transferred to a minister of state. On August 16, 2013, the multiculturalism portfolio was assigned to Jason Kenney, who was appointed minister for multiculturalism in addition to his other portfolios. Those portfolios and responsibilities such as for the Canadian Race Relations Foundation, were returned to the heritage minister with the swearing in of the 29th Canadian Ministry in November 2015. The heritage minister also gained responsibility for the National Capital Commission, which was formerly under the senior Ottawa-area cabinet minister under the Harper government; and the Canadian secretary to the Queen, which was previously under the Privy Council Office. Traditionally, the minister attends the Juno Awards to present the awards for Breakthrough Artist and Breakthrough Group Of The Year.

List of ministers

Key: {{legend||Liberal Party of Canada|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}} {{legend||Conservative Party of Canada|border=1px solid #AAAAAA}}

Responsibilities

Prior to 2003, their responsibilities included National Parks and historic sites. The Minister of Canadian Heritage is responsible for: • Department of Canadian Heritage • Canada Council for the Arts • Canadian Broadcasting Corporation • Canadian Race Relations Foundation • Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission • Canadian Secretary to the King • Library and Archives Canada • National Arts Centre • National Battlefields Commission • National Capital Commission • National Film Board of Canada • Canadian Museum of History • Canadian War Museum • Virtual Museum of New France • Canadian Museum for Human Rights • Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21 • Canadian Museum of Nature • Ingenium (Canada Science and Technology Museum, Canada Agriculture and Food Museum, Canada Aviation and Space Museum) • National Gallery of Canada • Portrait Gallery of Canada) • Public Service Commission of Canada • Public Service Staff Relations Board • Telefilm Canada

General duties

The minister's general powers, duties, and functions are set out by section 4 of the Department of Canadian Heritage Act, which provides as follows: (1) The powers, duties and functions of the Minister extend to and include all matters over which Parliament has jurisdiction, not by law assigned to any other department, board or agency of the Government of Canada, relating to Canadian identity and values, cultural development and heritage. (2) The Minister’s jurisdiction referred to in subsection (1) encompasses, but is not limited to, jurisdiction over In addition, sections 42 to 44 of the Official Languages Act confer certain other responsibilities on the minister of Canadian heritage (see minister responsible for Official Languages (Canada)).

Sources

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