Bill Morneau

Bill Morneau

politician Canada

Bill Morneau is a Canadian businessman and politician who served as Minister of Finance from 2015 to 2020. He played a significant role in shaping Canada's economic policies and navigating the country through various fiscal challenges.

Born on Oct 19, 1969 (56 years old)

Global Media Ratings
Dominance
0.00%
Persistence
0 wks
Reach
10,685
Power
527$
Sentiment
5.00
Countries Mentioned
Country Mentions Sentiment Dominance + Persistence x Population = Reach x GDP (millions) = Power
Hong Kong 1 5.00 0.14% +0% 7,500,700 10,685 $370,000 527$
Totals 1 7,500,700 10,685 $370,000 527$
Interactive World Map

Each country's color is based on "Mentions" from the table above.

Recent Mentions

Hong Kong Hong Kong: Canadian Prime Minister Bill Morneau was mentioned in the context of potential agreements with China. 5

明報 (Ming Pao): 特朗普警告加拿大勿與華達協議 否則加徵100%關稅 (22:09) - 20260124 - 國際 - 即時新聞

Canada Canada: Former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and former Finance Minister Bill Morneau arrive to deliver the federal budget in the House of Commons on March 22, 2016. 5

The Globe and Mail: Three ways to worry about Canada’s surging debt

Canada Canada: Former finance minister Bill Morneau visited a Canadian university to speak with students about the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project he once championed. 6

The Globe and Mail: Take our business and investing news quiz for the week ending Nov. 28

Canada Canada: The instructions contained in FinTRAC’s advisory are based on a directive by former finance minister Bill Morneau. 6

The Globe and Mail: FINTRAC to toughen rules on Iran as businesses flag more suspicious transactions

Canada Canada: Two of his cabinet ministers, Bill Morneau and Mary Ng, were found to have violated the Act. 4

The Globe and Mail: MIA: A real fix for Ottawa’s ethics rules

Canada Canada: Bill Morneau was the Finance Minister before François-Philippe Champagne and is seen as someone who struggled with the political aspects of the job. 5

The Globe and Mail: Why Carney picked a political veteran as Finance Minister over an executive