Skip to content

PM's staff say search is on for a local office that meets Carney's security needs

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney's office says work is "well underway" to find a local constituency office for the prime minister that meets his security requirements.
e0eb416b62daaafabbd5b3725ae979727193749ad4213200c38ad71edfdc5a90
Prime Minister Mark Carney arrives at his office across the street from Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, Aug. 6, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Spencer Colby

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Mark Carney's office says work is "well underway" to find a local constituency office for the prime minister that meets his security requirements.

As first reported this week by the Ottawa Citizen, Carney still doesn't have his own constituency office in his Nepean riding more than 100 days after the spring election.

“The process to confirm an office that meets all security requirements and is conveniently located and accessible for constituents is well underway," said Emily Williams, PMO's director of media relations, in an email response.

She said that until the local office is set up, residents of Nepean can access federal services through Defence Minister David McGuinty’s office, which is in the neighbouring riding of Ottawa South.

Carney, whose election campaign office was set up in a suburban office park in Nepean, will be the last member of his own cabinet to list a local riding office in the House of Commons directory.

Constituency offices act as a sort of doormat to democracy, allowing residents to connect with their local elected representatives.

members of Parliament employ local staff at these offices who can help citizens navigate government bureaucracy to access federal services.

Liberal MP Bruce Fanjoy, who represents the Ottawa riding of Carleton, is in the process of moving out of the constituency office he took over from Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who lost the riding in an upset in the April election.

Fanjoy said he is moving his office to another location after deciding not to renew the old lease because he found the office space was too small for his staff of six.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 14, 2025.

Kyle Duggan, The Canadian Press