Parliament returns Monday, April 13
Liberal

Julie Dabrusin

LiberalToronto—DanforthOntario
1014Votes Cast
20Speeches
0Bills Sponsored
Background
Born
April 16, 1971 — Montreal
Family
Two daughters
Education
BA Near and Middle Eastern Studies, McGill University, 1994; Law Degree, University of Toronto, 1997
Career
Lawyer with Rogers Partners LLP for 13 years
Political Experience
MP for Toronto—Danforth since 2015; Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Canadian Heritage (2019-2021); Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Environment and Climate Change and to the Minister of Energy and Natural Resources (2021 to March 2025); Minister of the Environment, Climate Change and Nature (since 2025)
Notable
Recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal in 2013
Where Julie Stands

Where Julie falls on key policy spectrums

They vote

Your Money

Taxes & Government SpendingBusiness & Worker RulesEnergy & the Economy

People & Society

HealthcareImmigrationIndigenous PeoplesIdentity & Human RightsEducation & ChildcareDrug Policy

How We're Governed

National Security & DefencePolitical & Electoral ReformCrime & Public SafetyFirearms

Land & Community

Environment, Climate & ResourcesHousing & Cost of LivingRural Communities & Culture
They vote
Riding
House Seat
2025 Election Results — Toronto—Danforth

Julie Dabrusin won with 39,191 votes (66.6%)

Julie Dabrusin(Liberal)39,191 (66.6%)
Ashik Hussain(Conservative)11,187 (19.0%)
Clare Hacksel(NDP-New Democratic Party)7,626 (13.0%)
Silvia Stardust(Green Party)626 (1.1%)
Liz White(Animal Protection Party)251 (0.4%)

Total votes cast: 58,881

Recent Activity
Mar 25, 2026
AnswerTaxation

Mr. Speaker, I am glad to be able to stand up here once again to reiterate and remind the members opposite that the industrial carbon price does not increase the cost of food. Studies show that, but if they want to talk about what we can do to help Canadians, I hope that they will celebrate alongside me that our government cut taxes for Canadians. That is a win. They can talk about imaginary [more]

Mar 25, 2026
AnswerThe Economy

Mr. Speaker, if the member would like to talk about farmers, and canola farmers specifically, let us talk about how the clean fuel regulations actually help canola farmers. It adds to the value of a bushel of canola. Leader of the Opposition Themay want to speak to some of his constituents. He represents the second-largest canola-producing riding in all of Alberta, and right next to him is the [more]

Mar 12, 2026
AnswerTaxation

Mr. Speaker, it seems like the members opposite from the Conservative Party have a big interest in the clean fuel standard. Let me talk to them and to their constituents about the opportunities that are created by this. Canola farmers in Alberta will actually see an increase in the value of their product. They will actually see an increase in their farm revenue. We see the Imperial renewable [more]

Mar 12, 2026
AnswerThe Economy

Mr. Speaker, I am standing up for my daily reminder that studies show that the industrial carbon price adds zero dollars to the cost of food. If the Conservatives want to speak about taxes, I can point out that on this side of the House, we cut them. If they want to talk about imaginary taxes, they can go ahead, but we are going to make sure that we support Canadians with real measures.

Mar 12, 2026

I have not made that assessment, but I do have Andrew Campbell with me from Parks Canada, and he can perhaps provide more detail on that.

Mar 12, 2026

—but I don't believe that access is going to be a problem.

Mar 12, 2026

Thank you, Mr. Chair. I'd like to begin by acknowledging that we are meeting on the traditional territory of the Algonquin Anishinabe Nation. I'm happy to meet with members of the committee to discuss the 2025-26 supplementary estimates (C) for Environment and Climate Change Canada, the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada and the Parks Canada Agency. The spending adjustments we are discussing [more]

Mar 12, 2026

What I can say is that there's a draft consultation coming out. We are aware of the issues, and that is something that's going to be up for a conversation. I know that we are all very aware of the concerns and the issues. I'm just letting you know, and I'm happy to follow up with you again on that.

Mar 12, 2026

I very much do not ignore their advice. They come with very important experience and very important recommendations. As I mentioned, I'll be meeting with them on Friday. We are working on how we can make it the most effective NZAB possible.

Mar 12, 2026

I'll add one thing before we go there. What happened in Jasper was devastating, so I definitely want to speak about the people who were impacted by that fire. However, a lot of the work done by Parks Canada managed to save a lot of important infrastructure there as well.

Mar 12, 2026

I'm happy to provide you with greater detail as we move forward. The project is obviously not complete, so I need to be able to get you better information as we move to completion—