Maxime Bernier, Peter MacKay and Jim Prentice have emerged as big winners in Prime Minister Stephen Harper's cabinet shuffle.
Bernier, a Quebec MP first elected in 2006, moves from industry to foreign affairs. He replaces MacKay, from Nova Scotia, who becomes defence minister.
MacKay replaces Gordon O'Connor, the retired general and Ontario MP who was seen as a poor communicator, particularly on the crucial Afghanistan file.
Prentice, an Alberta MP who is considered one of Harper's most able ministers, moves to the industry portfolio from Indian affairs.
Harper's Conservative minority government is expected to shift to a "second phase" with Wednesday's shuffle held at Rideau Hall in Ottawa. The prime minister is expected to prorogue Parliament, deliver a throne speech and move to a new agenda beyond the five priorities it touted in the 2006 election campaign.
Modernizing Canada's economy is going to be a key part of that agenda, which will make Industry a key portfolio.
Here are some other cabinet moves:
Saskatchewan MP Gerry Ritz becomes agriculture minister, having been a secretary of state for tourism. He replaces fellow Saskatchewan MP and Revenue Minister Carol Skelton, who has announced she won't run again.
O'Connor becomes revenue minister.
Another new face in cabinet is Alberta MP Diane Ablonczy, who replaces Ritz.
Current Agriculture Minister Chuck Strahl, a B.C. MP, becomes Indian Affairs minister.
Quebec MP Josee Verner becomes heritage minister, swapping jobs with Ontario's Bev Oda, who becomes international development minister.
Jim Flaherty will remain as finance minister, despite enduring a backlash for the government's decision to tax income trusts -- essentially breaking an earlier campaign promise.
Flaherty also came under fire for the government's new equalization formula, that Nova Scotia Premier Rodney MacDonald argued causes problems for the province's Atlantic Accord offshore deal.
MacDonald told The Canadian Press change at the ministry "wouldn't be such a bad thing."