Charles Sousa
- Born
- September 27, 1958
- Family
- Lives in Clarkson with his wife Zenaida and their three children.
- Education
- Business Administration degree from Wilfrid Laurier University in 1982; fellowship at the Institute of Canadian Bankers in 1991; Executive MBA from the Richard Ivey School of Business at the University of Western Ontario in 1994.
- Career
- Worked at Royal Bank of Canada (RBC) Financial Group for more than 20 years, primarily as Director Commercial Banking and Director Marketing at RBC Dominion Securities. Owned and operated a factoring company that offered asset base financing to small businesses.
- Political Experience
- Elected to represent Mississauga South in the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in 2007. Minister of Labour in 2010. Ontario's minister of citizenship and immigration in 2011. Minister of Finance for Ontario from 2013 to 2018. Member of Parliament from Mississauga-Lakeshore since December 12, 2022.
- Notable
- Appointed as the Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Public Services and Procurement in September 2023.
Where Charles falls on key policy spectrums
Your Money
People & Society
How We're Governed
Land & Community
Charles Sousa won with 34,971 votes (52.4%)
Total votes cast: 66,797
Mr. Speaker, the member reminds us that when I was finance minister, we bailed out and supported the auto industry in Windsor. If it were not for Ontario's participation, against the wishes of the Conservatives, they would have faltered. We stood by the Canadian auto workers, we stood by the industry and we safeguarded those jobs and those companies. We will continue to do so. Foreign direct [more]
Mr. Speaker, I agree that every sector of our economy from coast to coast to coast matters. Canada united and supporting every industry throughout the country is important, which includes, of course, those very same companies in Quebec. When the auto sector took a dive in 2008, the Ontario government and the federal government at the time stepped in to provide that support. Had it not been for [more]
Mr. Speaker, I rise today to discuss the future of Canada's automotive industry and how the government is working to protect the industry and Canadian workers. Canada's automotive sector has long been and remains a cornerstone of our economy. It has defined communities, strengthened our middle class and anchored Canada as a trusted partner in global manufacturing, while supporting hundreds of [more]
Mr. Speaker, it is important that Canada stays at the forefront of industry and innovation. It is important that we continue to attract investment because we are trusted partners. It is important that we look at the auto sector in a broader scope. It is important that we look to the future of auto. We do not pick winners and losers. They are picking losers. We need to ensure that those [more]
Madam Speaker, the member opposite may or may not know that CANDU reactors and the corporation are within my riding. I have met with representatives of Candu Energy on a number of occasions. We talked about small modular reactors providing supports and electricity to those remote communities in the far north that rely primarily on diesel, which is extremely dirty, to provide greater sources of, [more]
Thank you, Madam Speaker. I know the members are very interested in what is happening. It is creating discussion, and that is important. After 25 years in the private sector, I wanted to give back to a society that enabled us to have opportunity. Many of us are products of immigration. My parents came in 1953 from a postwar fascist regime in Europe, seeking that opportunity to continue to [more]
Mr. Speaker, the world is changing rapidly and Canadians gave the government a strong mandate to protect our workers and industries, all while building Canada strong. Last week, we announced the defence industrial strategy, designed to transform our defence industry and make Canada more secure. Minister of Industry Can theplease share what this strategy means for Canadian workers and industries [more]
Madam Speaker, I appreciate that very much, and I think all of us appreciate it. All of us in the House should stand proud and tall for the fact that Canada is seen around the world, and by the G7 and the IMF, for its ability and capacity to grow and invest. Canada has done extraordinary things during downturns. Certainly in 2008, we weathered it better than any other part of the world because we [more]