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.
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 on Monday announced his resignation as Liberal Party leader in the wake of rising discontent over his leadership. Trudeau came to power in 2015. Party rule. He will be stepping down as soon as his party can find a successor.
His initial popularity helped Justin Trudeau survive calamities that could have sunk other Canadian politicians.
Opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has responded to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's resignation announcement. In a taped message posted on X, Poilievre said that “Canadians desperate to turn the page on this dark chapter in our ...
Justin Trudeau's leadership has faced significant challenges in the wake of the COVID crisis, leading to a loss of confidence among Canadians from various backgrounds.
The prime minister’s celebrity helped bring him to power. Even after his popularity collapsed, it still drew crowds.
The Canadian prime minister, who said on Monday he would step down, has spent a quarter-century in the political spotlight.
Carney coronation? We Liberals love a coronation. Mark Carney is likely to be the next prime minister of Canada. He’s also likely to lose the next election, badly. In 1958, Lester B. Pearson lost, badly.
Fans of carbon taxes might lament. But the end of the consumer carbon tax won’t necessarily bring an end to carbon pricing in Canada. Its death might clarify that the real debate is how Canada is going to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions.