Jon Reyes | |
Office: | Minister of Labour and Immigration |
Term Start: | January 30, 2023 |
Term End: | October 18, 2023 |
Premier: | Heather Stefanson |
Predecessor: | Portfolio re-established |
Successor: | Malaya Marcelino |
Office1: | Minister of Advanced Education, Skills and Immigration |
Term Start1: | January 18, 2022 |
Term End1: | January 30, 2023 |
Premier1: | Heather Stefanson |
Predecessor1: | Wayne Ewasko |
Successor1: | Sarah Guillemard |
Office2: | Minister of Economic Development and Jobs |
Term Start2: | July 15, 2021 |
Term End2: | January 18, 2022 |
Premier2: | Brian Pallister Kelvin Goertzen Heather Stefanson |
Predecessor2: | Ralph Eichler |
Successor2: | Cliff Cullen |
Office3: | Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba for Waverley |
Term Start3: | September 10, 2019 |
Term End3: | September 5, 2023 |
Predecessor3: | first member |
Successor3: | David Pankratz |
Office4: | Member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba for St. Norbert |
Term Start4: | April 19, 2016 |
Term End4: | August 12, 2019 |
Predecessor4: | Dave Gaudreau |
Successor4: | Riding dissolved |
Party: | Progressive Conservative |
Birth Place: | Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada |
Spouse: | Cynthia |
Children: | 2 |
Alma Mater: | Royal Roads University |
Branch: | Royal Canadian Navy |
Jon Reyes (born 1971 or 1972) is a Canadian politician and former member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba.
He mostly recently served as Minister of Labour and Immigration from January to October, 2023, and was previously the Minister of Advanced Education, Skills and Immigration, Minister of Economic Development and Jobs. From 2016 to 2021, Reyes also served as Special Envoy for Military Affairs for Manitoba.
A member of the Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba, he was first elected in the 2016 provincial election as MLA for St. Norbert,[1] and was re-elected in 2019 as MLA for Waverley.[2] Running for re-election for Waverely in 2023, Reyes was unseated by NDP candidate David Pankratz.[3]
Reyes is the first Canadian-born person of Filipino descent to serve in the Manitoba legislature.[4] [5]
Jon Reyes was born and raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba, around 1972.[6]
Reyes served 10 years in the Canadian Forces in both the Communication Reserves and the regular force with the Royal Canadian Navy (RCN), including 5 years stationed on HMCS Winnipeg.[7] As a reservist, he was awarded the Special Service Medal (NATO) while serving at CFB Lahr in Germany. Reyes served with the RCN until 2000 as a Naval Combat Information Operator and then as an instructor at Canadian Forces Fleet School Pacific, located at CFB Esquimalt on Vancouver Island.
Reyes received a Bachelor of Commerce in Entrepreneurial Management at Royal Roads University. After a brief career as a civil servant in the federal government, Reyes opened two small businesses with his wife Cynthia, which they owned and operated for 16 years.
In 2010, Reyes founded the Manitoba Filipino Business Council (MFBC) and served as the organization's first president until 2015. During his tenure as President of MFBC, he helped develop stronger trade ties between Canada and the Philippines. He has also served as a former member of the Manitoba Football Officials Association and as a support crew member for the Canadian Football League.
Reyes was a director of the Kidney Foundation of Canada - Manitoba Branch from 2013 until 2016, where he initiated the Filipino Kidney Health Initiative . He was also named to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) Commanding Officer's Cultural Diversity Advisory Committee in 2015 .
In the 2016 election, Reyes defeated incumbent NDP MLA Dave Gaudreau for the St. Norbert constituency, and was subsequently appointed the Special Envoy for Military Affairs (SEMA) by Premier Brian Pallister.
On May 10, 2017, Reyes was named to the Fiscal Responsibility Committee of Cabinet, a committee tasked to examine priority matters of the Government of Manitoba related to fiscal and budgetary responsibility, which included strategic transformation priorities, providing oversight for key transformation projects identified in the Fiscal Performance Review and assuming responsibility for other strategic initiatives as directed by Treasury Board or Cabinet.
Reyes was appointed President of the Manitoba Branch of the Assemblée parlementaire de la Francophonie (APF) in March 2018 and met with provincial and territorial representatives to address the state of Francophone affairs in Manitoba, at the 34th Session of the APF Regional Assembly in Quebec City on July 10, 2018.[8]
He has also represented the Province of Manitoba at the inaugural Seamless Canada Meeting at the Canadian Forces Staff College in Toronto held on June 27, 2018, and the second Seamless Canada Meeting in Ottawa on December 5, 2018, where he met with other provincial/territorial representatives to share a compilation of initiatives and services already in place for Manitoba's military community.
On, December 6, 2018, Reyes was named to the Economic Growth Committee of Cabinet, a committee which oversees a whole-of-government approach to growing the provincial economy.
The St. Norbert constituency was abolished leading up to the 2019 provincial election, and Reyes sought election in the newly formed constituency of Waverley. He won with approximately 50% of the vote.
In the 2023 provincial election, Reyes again sought re-election in his constituency of Waverley. Reyes faced NDP candidate David Pankratz, a former paramedic and firefighter, who ran his campaign primarily on healthcare, a key issue in the election campaign. During the campaign, Reyes received the endorsement of former NDP candidate and prior opponent Dashi Zargani. Pankratz ultimately narrowly defeated Reyes by 119 votes.[9]
Reyes is married and has two children.[7]
He has been a member of the Knights of Columbus since 2013.
On January 8, 2022, Reyes was heavily criticized and made international headlines for posting a photo of his wife on Twitter shoveling their driveway after she finished a 12-hour shift as a nurse working during the COVID-19 pandemic.[10] [11] His wife later defended him.[12] [13]