Trudeau’s policies went well beyond Biden’s — he passed a federal carbon-pricing system and successfully defended it against several challenges, something Democrats in the United States have never been able to do.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced his resignation on Monday, ending nearly ten years at the country's helm. The decision follows mounting discontent over his leadership and escalating internal turmoil, underscored by the sudden departure of his finance minister.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre issued the following statement following Justin Trudeau’s resignation as Liberal leader. The prime minister has asked the Governor General to prorogue Parliament so a new Liberal leader can be chosen. Watch the video or read the full text of Poilievre’s statement:
Justin Trudeau resigned as the Canadian Prime Minister. Pierre Poilievre, leader of the Conservative Party, is expected to be the next Prime Minister. Poilievre criticized the Liberals and emphasized the need for a carbon tax election to elect Conservatives.
The leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, who has drawn comparisons to President-elect Donald Trump, was thrown into the global spotlight on Monday when Trudeau — his lefty rival
Pierre Poilievre's views on Bitcoin have sometimes attracted controversy, but a lot has changed over the past three years.
The Trump-like Conservative leader is riding an anti-establishment wave—and will almost certainly become PM this year.
Justin Trudeau has announced he will step down after nine years as Canadian prime minister in the face of a mounting set of crises, but stay in office until a replacement party leader is chosen.
Federal conservative party leader Pierre Poilievre held a press conference in Delta this morning.Standing in front of several homes under construction, he said they were nice houses, and it was a shame that so few people in BC could afford them.
Will the entrance of Mark Carney into the Liberal leadership race force the Conservatives to adopt a new approach?
Like Trump to the south, Poilievre believes energy — both renewable and fossil fuels — can create jobs and rescue the economy. But he also argues Canada’s abundance of oil is “underpriced’ and underulitilised in geopolitics because there is only one pipeline that does not head straight to the US.