Letter to a minister: It’s time to make public safety a priority

Commentary

Minister of Public Safety Gary Anandasangaree speaks in the Foyer of the House of Commons in Ottawa, Oct. 8, 2025. Spencer Colby/The Canadian Press.

In a departure from past practice, Prime Minister Carney has decided not to issue individual mandate letters to his ministers, leaving each to determine on their own how best to contribute to the government’s agenda and fulfill their responsibilities. In Letter to a minister, The Hub’s new series in collaboration with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, we will provide each minister with a policy agenda that is bold enough to address the grave challenges that the country faces, but manageable enough to be implemented in a realistic time frame.

The series continues this week with a letter to the minister of public safety.

The Honourable Gary Anandasangaree, P.C., M.P.
Minister of Public Safety
House of Commons,
Ottawa, Ontario

Dear minister,

Congratulations on your appointment as the minister of public safety. You have been entrusted with the job of making our streets safer, ensuring our national borders are strong and protected, and decisively addressing national security threats. At any time in our history, this would be a daunting challenge. Today, the key institutions in your purview, including the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), Corrections Canada, and the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA), are overstretched, under-equipped, and misaligned with the complex demands of modern enforcement. These organizations face an unprecedented need for change.

Expectations are high. Canadians are worried about public safety. Crime—especially violent crime—is up. And with issues such as border security and financial crime now being linked to the broader Canadian economy through a trade war with the United States, Canadians are more aware of and worried about these issues than ever. At a time when global instability and shifting geopolitical relationships have brought national security into sharper focus, both at home and among our international partners, your leadership will be critical.

In his mandate letter, the prime minister has tasked you with working alongside your colleagues to “protect Canadian sovereignty and safety.” In this letter, I offer concrete recommendations to help you meet this critical and complex challenge.

Modernize the RCMP

More than 150 years after their founding, the RCMP remain a powerful symbol of Canadian identity. However, the past decade has witnessed an increase in calls for reform to be undertaken to preserve the integrity of the institution. Yet the force faces mounting challenges that underscore the urgent need to evolve. From recruitment models that prepare officers for traditional policing but not complex financial or cyber investigations, to an overstretched mandate that spans community policing, federal enforcement, and national security, the RCMP is being asked to do too much with too little. Organized crime, money laundering, and digital threats require specialized, modern responses—ones that demand focused training, strategic resourcing, and a recalibration of priorities. To remain effective and credible, the RCMP must transition from a legacy model to a forward-looking institution equipped for the realities of 21st-century policing. To achieve this, bold action is required in two areas:

First, it is time to phase out the RCMP’s community policing role and concentrate its efforts on national priorities. Although the current Police Services Agreements with the provinces and territories do not expire until 2032, the agreements can be terminated earlier as long as two years’ notice is given. The federal government should therefore immediately signal that it intends the RCMP to exit contract policing by the end of 2027. An announcement now gives time to work out the transition with the provinces, including required transitional funding.

The RCMP should continue to provide community policing in the territories, protective services, and policing of Indigenous communities where that is the desire of the community. Further, the federal government will need to maintain some key national infrastructure, such as the National Forensic Laboratory Service and the RCMP Academy (the “Depot”).

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