Power Corporation of Canada

Demarais-controlled since 1968. Great-West Lifeco, IGM Financial, Pargesa/GBL European holdings, Sagard private equity, Wealthsimple. The longest single-family multi-cabinet interlock on the Canadian public record — spanning Mulroney as director, the Chrétien–Desmarais marriage (1981), Pierre Trudeau as senior adviser pre-PM, Paul Martin's early career inside the Power Corp shipping subsidiary.

Sources: SEDAR+ filings · NYSE/TSX disclosures · Power Corp annual reports · public marriage and career biographies Discipline: public-record claims only Filed: 2026-05-04
Power Corporation is not a scandal in the single-event sense the Trudeau Foundation, WE Charity, or Aga Khan Foundation dossiers document. There is no Conflict of Interest Act breach finding against Power Corp, no committee inquiry, no cancelled federal contract. The argumentative weight of this dossier comes from pattern length rather than any one event: five-plus decades, one controlling family, named ties to four sitting or future Prime Ministers, all on the public corporate filing and biographical record. The interlocks are not allegations — they are documented marriages, signed director appointments, and published career biographies.

1. What Power Corporation is

Power Corporation of Canada is a publicly-traded holding company headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX: POW). Founded in 1925 by Arthur Nesbitt and Edward Loake as an industrial-and-utilities holding company, Power Corp shifted to its modern role as a financial-services and global-holdings company under Paul Desmarais Sr., who acquired controlling interest in 1968 and rebuilt the company around insurance, asset management, and European positions.

The company files quarterly and annual disclosures with Canadian securities regulators on SEDAR+ and is subject to the public reporting requirements of any TSX-listed issuer. Demarais-family voting control is held through The Desmarais Family Residuary Trust and structured-shareholding vehicles. The family's voting block has not been publicly contested in modern memory.

2. The current holdings (post-2020 simplified structure)

Until 2020 Power Corporation operated through its 2/3-owned subsidiary Power Financial Corporation. In February 2020 Power Corp announced it would absorb Power Financial by acquiring the public-float minority stake, simplifying the holding-company structure into a single TSX issuer. The holdings below reflect that simplified post-2020 structure.

Subsidiary / positionSectorNotes
Great-West Lifeco (TSX: GWO)InsuranceMajor Canadian life-insurance and reinsurance group; owns Empower Retirement (US), Irish Life, Canada Life. Power Corp holds the controlling interest.
IGM Financial (TSX: IGM)Asset managementParent of Investors Group (now IG Wealth Management) and Mackenzie Financial. One of Canada's largest mutual-fund managers. Power Corp controlling interest.
Pargesa Holding (Switzerland) → Groupe Bruxelles Lambert (GBL) (Belgium)European industrial / consumer holdingsHeld via Parjointco, a 50/50 venture with the Belgian Frères family. GBL portfolio has historically included LafargeHolcim, Imerys, Adidas, Pernod Ricard, and TotalEnergies.
SagardPrivate equity / alternative asset managementPower Corp's alternative-investments arm; manages funds across private equity, credit, venture capital, and real estate.
Power SustainableSustainable / energy-transition investingFounded by Paul Desmarais III; Sustainable energy and infrastructure platform.
WealthsimpleCanadian fintech / consumer financePower Corp held a significant equity stake; Wealthsimple Canada's largest robo-advisor / consumer fintech platform.

The portfolio gives the Demarais family direct or indirect exposure to: a substantial fraction of Canadian life-insurance and pension-management assets; a substantial fraction of Canadian retail mutual-fund management; multiple European blue-chip companies via Pargesa/GBL; a Canadian private-equity platform; an energy-transition investing platform; and a leading Canadian fintech.

3. The Demarais family — three generations

Paul Desmarais Sr. (1927–2013)

Acquired controlling interest in Power Corporation in 1968; built the modern Power Corp through acquisitions and restructuring across insurance, asset management, and European holdings. Patriarch of the family until his death in October 2013. Knight of the Legion of Honour (France); Companion of the Order of Canada.

SRC: Power Corp annual reports; public biographies; Power Corp 1968 acquisition disclosures

Paul Desmarais Jr. (b. 1954)

Co-CEO of Power Corporation alongside his brother André from 1996 until 2020. After the 2020 simplification, transitioned to non-executive Chairman of the Board of Power Corp. Former chair of Pargesa Holding. Continues as one of the two principal heads of the Desmarais Family Residuary Trust.

SRC: Power Corp annual reports; SEDAR+ filings

André Desmarais (b. 1956; deceased 2024)

Co-CEO of Power Corporation alongside his brother Paul Jr. from 1996 until 2020. Long-time chair of the Canada-China Business Council — the principal documented bridge between Power Corp's executive layer and Canadian Sino-policy advocacy. Married France Chrétien, daughter of future Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, in 1981.

SRC: Power Corp annual reports; CCBC public records; public marriage record

Paul Desmarais III (b. 1982)

Founded Power Sustainable, the energy-transition investing platform. Represents the third generation of family leadership. Active across multiple Power Corp subsidiaries and on the boards of Pargesa-system entities.

SRC: Power Corp annual reports; Power Sustainable public disclosures

4. The multi-cabinet interlock — the load-bearing record

Across the period 1965–2024, named individuals who later held or had held Canadian federal cabinet office — including the Prime Ministership — have public-record ties to Power Corporation. The pattern is the load-bearing fact of this dossier.

Pierre Elliott Trudeau (1919–2000)
PM 1968–79, 1980–84 · Power Corp adviser pre-PM

Worked as a senior policy adviser at Power Corporation in 1965–1966, in the period immediately before he entered federal politics. Ran for and won a Liberal Party nomination in 1965, joined cabinet under Pearson in 1967, became PM in 1968.

Paul Martin (b. 1938)
PM 2003–06 · Finance Min 1993–2002 · Power Corp early-career executive

Worked at Canada Steamship Lines (CSL), then a Power Corp shipping subsidiary, in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Acquired CSL from Power Corp in 1981 and ran it as his own private company until entering politics. Federal Finance Minister 1993–2002, Prime Minister 2003–2006.

Brian Mulroney (1939–2024)
PM 1984–93 · Power Corp director post-politics

After leaving the Prime Ministership in 1993, served on the Power Corporation Board of Directors as a senior director. Also held seats on Power Financial and on Pargesa-system boards. The post-cabinet board appointment is on the public Power Corp annual-report record.

Jean Chrétien (b. 1934) — via marriage
PM 1993–2003 · daughter married A. Desmarais 1981

Daughter France Chrétien married André Desmarais in 1981, twelve years before Chrétien became Prime Minister. The marriage is on the public record. France Chrétien-Desmarais herself sits on multiple Power Corp–system boards. Their son Olivier Desmarais is now a senior figure at Power Corp.

Justin Trudeau (b. 1971)
PM 2015– · documented Demarais-family social ties

Has documented social and family ties to the Demarais circle through his father's prior Power Corp adviser period and through cross-cabinet relationships. Has spoken at and attended Power-Corp–hosted and Power-Corp–sponsored events. The ties are documented on the family-connections record but are not the subject of any per-PM ethics finding.

Maurice Strong (1929–2015)
UN Climate · Power Corp senior adviser

Long-time senior adviser to Power Corporation. Also Secretary-General of the 1992 UN Earth Summit (Rio); founder of the UN Environment Programme. The simultaneous senior-adviser-and-UN-Climate roles bridged Power Corp's commercial position into the international climate-policy negotiation process.

5. International extensions — Pargesa, GBL, and the Canada-China Business Council

Pargesa / GBL — European holdings

Power Corporation has held its principal European exposure through Pargesa Holding S.A. (Geneva), in turn the controlling shareholder of Groupe Bruxelles Lambert (Brussels). Pargesa was historically held through Parjointco, a 50/50 venture between Power Corp and the Belgian Frères family. The GBL portfolio has at various times included LafargeHolcim (cement), Imerys (industrial minerals), Adidas (apparel), Pernod Ricard (spirits), and TotalEnergies (oil and gas) — giving Power Corp indirect Canadian-controlled exposure to a large slice of European industrial and consumer markets.

SRC: Power Corp annual reports; Pargesa Holding S.A. annual reports; GBL public disclosures

Canada-China Business Council — the Sino bridge

André Desmarais served as long-time chair of the Canada-China Business Council (CCBC), the principal Canadian peak-body promoting bilateral commerce with the People's Republic of China. CCBC was active across the Meng Wanzhou / Two Michaels period of Canada-China relations. See ngo-lobbyist-registry.html §5 and foreign-interference-deep.html.

SRC: CCBC public records; Power Corp annual reports; HoC committee evidence on Canada-China relations

6. Timeline (compressed)

1925
Power Corporation incorporated by Arthur Nesbitt and Edward Loake.
1965–1966
Pierre Elliott Trudeau works as a senior policy adviser at Power Corporation immediately before entering federal Liberal politics.
1968
Paul Desmarais Sr. acquires controlling interest in Power Corp. Same year Pierre Trudeau becomes Prime Minister.
Late 1960s — early 1970s
Paul Martin works as a young executive at Power Corp's shipping subsidiary Canada Steamship Lines.
1981
André Desmarais marries France Chrétien, daughter of future PM Jean Chrétien. Same year Paul Martin acquires CSL from Power Corp.
1984–93
Brian Mulroney serves as Prime Minister.
1993
Mulroney leaves PM office; joins Power Corporation Board of Directors. Jean Chrétien becomes PM.
1996
Paul Desmarais Jr. and André Desmarais become co-CEOs of Power Corporation.
1992 onward
Maurice Strong simultaneously serves as Power Corp senior adviser and chairs major UN climate-policy bodies (Rio Earth Summit, UNEP).
2003–2006
Paul Martin serves as Prime Minister.
2013
Paul Desmarais Sr. dies (October).
2020
Power Corp simplifies structure: absorbs Power Financial. Co-CEO era ends; Paul Jr. becomes non-executive Chairman.
2024
André Desmarais dies.

7. The structural questions the record raises

Editorial framing.

The Power Corp record does not produce an Ethics Commissioner finding, a cancelled federal contract, or a committee-inquiry verdict. The structural questions it raises are different in kind:

8. What this page does not assert

Editorial framing.

This page does not assert that any named individual has committed a criminal offence within the jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court or the Criminal Code of Canada. It does not assert that any documented connection — board appointment, marriage, advisory role, employment history — is per se illegal. Marriages and director appointments are public records of legal acts. Federal cabinet ministers who hold or held positions at private companies before or after their political careers are not, on that fact alone, in any conflict-of-interest position; the Conflict of Interest Act applies prospectively to active office holders, not retrospectively to private-sector careers, and not at all to private marriages.

This page asserts only what the public record contains: that the company has been Demarais-controlled since 1968, that the named multi-cabinet ties are documented in corporate filings, marriage records, and biographical sources, and that the pattern length — the same controlling family, the same set of cabinet interlocks, across five-plus decades — is the structural fact. The reader is invited to draw their own conclusions from the public-record pattern.

Related dossiers

Primary sources