Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer has shaken up his shadow cabinet – two weeks before parliamentarians return to the House of Commons.

In a press release Friday afternoon, he announced he’d appointed two new members and shuffled several experienced MPs into new roles.

“Our Conservative team is focused squarely on holding the Liberals to account and presenting Canadians with a clear alternative to Justin Trudeau,” he said in the release. “The changes to Shadow Cabinet I announce today reflect the growing strength of our team and our commitment to helping Canadians not only get by, but get ahead.”

The major shakeup sees a number of Conservative MPs moved to new roles on Scheer’s front bench. Of note, longtime MP Tony Clement has been named the party’s new justice critic. Former foreign affairs minister Rob Nicholson has been named the shadow minister of public services and procurement.

Meanwhile, Ontario MP and former leadership candidate Michael Chong has been named the party’s new science critic, while John Barlow, who had been serving as the party’s associate critic for agriculture, has been named critic for labour, employment and workforce file.

The full list of changes:

Dan Albas moves from small business to innovation, science and economic development and internal trade

John Barlow moves from associate shadow minister of agriculture and agri-Food moves to employment, workforce development, and labour

Hon. Steven Blaney takes over the Canadian heritage, official languages, and La Francophonie file

Hon. Michael Chong becomes the shadow minister for science

Hon. Tony Clement is the shadow minister of justice

Edmonton MP Matt Jeneroux is named shadow minister for infrastructure, communities and urban affairs

Hon. Rob Nicholson moves from justice to become shadow minister of public services and procurement

Quebec Pierre Paul-Hus remains shadow minister of public safety and emergency preparedness, adds border security

Alberta MP Blake Richards becomes the shadow critic for small business, export promotion and tourism

Bob Saroya, who’s currently the associate shadow minister for immigration, refugees, and citizenship, adds multiculturalism to his file

Scheer has also added two new critics: Calgary MP Stephanie Kusie has been named the shadow minister for democratic institutions. Recently elected Quebec MP Richard Martel has been named the associate shadow minister for national defence.