O'Regan serves on the Boards of Katimavik, Canada's leading youth service-learning programme, and The Rooms, which houses the provincial art gallery, museum, and archives of Newfoundland and Labrador. News. In January 2016, O’Regan announced that he entered an alcoholism rehabilitation program. Try to ask a specific question. He studied marketing strategies at INSEAD, an international business school near Paris, France. [5] Since leaving CTV he has occasionally been a fill-in host on radio station CFRB in Toronto,[6] and worked on independent television productions and as a media innovator in residence at Ryerson University. Il étudie les sciences politiques l'Université Saint-Francis-Xavier d'Antigonish (N.-É.) Il quitte le groupe l'année suivante et devient journaliste indépendant, il intervient également ponctuellement sur CFRB (Toronto) et reçoit le [Quoi ?] O’Regan says the complications are related to a surgery he had in 2017. [2] At the age of 10, O'Regan became a regional correspondent for CBC Radio's Anybody Home?, producing stories that celebrated the unique accomplishments of local residents - a professor hunting for giant squid to one woman's fight against leukemia. 12K likes. Community. If Seamus O'Regan is your MP, introduce yourself as a constituent —MPs tend to put much more stock in letters from inside their districts.
He currently serves as Minister of Natural Resources and formerly served as Minister of Indigenous Services and Minister of Veterans Affairs. His father, also named Seamus O'Regan, was a judge of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador. En 1991, il travaille au cabinet de Jean Charest, alors ministre de l'environnement du Canada, au cabinet d'Edward Roberts, ministre de la Justice de Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador de 1992 à 1999, puis devient rédacteur de discours et conseiller principal de Brian Tobin, Premier ministre de Terre-Neuve-et-Labrador (1996-2000).
Watch Queue Queue » de CBC Radio[1]. Seamus Thomas Harris O'Regan PC MP (born January 18, 1971) is a Canadian politician and former television personality from Newfoundland and Labrador.He currently serves as Minister of Natural Resources and formerly served as Minister of Indigenous Services and Minister of Veterans Affairs.He was a correspondent with CTV National News, and a former host of Canada AM, which he co-hosted … This video is unavailable. [4], In 2000, O'Regan joined talktv's current affairs program, the chatroom. He also sits on the board of directors for fellow Newfoundlander Allan Hawco's theatre company, The Company Theatre, located in Toronto. Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre.
D'après le journal Reporterre, « régulièrement critiqué pour son parti pris propétrolier », le gouvernement de Justin Trudeau « semble plus aligné sur Donald Trump que sur le Parti démocrate sur le sujet des oléoducs[8]. Seamus O'Regan, St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador. Ministre fédéral des Ressources naturelles, il soutient la construction de l’oléoduc Keystone XL, pourtant décrié pour son impact sur l’environnement.