Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau resigns

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Canada's Justin Trudeau cites 'internal battles' as he ends nine-year run

Watch: Moment Justin Trudeau resigns as Canadian prime minister

Under growing pressure from his own party, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced he will step down and end his nine-year stretch as leader. Trudeau said he would stay on in office until his Liberal Party can choose a new leader, and that parliament would be prorogued - or suspended - until 24 March. "This country deserves a real choice in the next election and it has become clear to me that if I'm having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best option in that election," he said during a press conference Monday. Trudeau's personal unpopularity with Canadians had become an increasing drag on his party's fortunes in advance of federal elections later this year.

"Last night, over dinner, I told my kids about the decision that I'm sharing with you today," he told the news conference in Ottawa. "I intend to resign as party leader, as prime minister, after the party selects its next leader through a robust nationwide competitive process," he said. The president of the Liberal Party, Sachit Mehra, said a meeting of the party's board of directors would be held this week to begin the process of selecting a new leader. Who might replace Trudeau as Liberal Party leader? Why the Trudeau era has come to an end now What happens next for Canada? In a statement, he added: "Liberals across the country are immensely grateful to Justin Trudeau for more than a decade of leadership to our Party and the country." "As Prime Minister, his vision delivered transformational progress for Canadians," he said, citing programmes his government has implemented like the Canada Child Benefit and the establishment of dental care and pharmacare coverage for some medication. Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre said "nothing has changed" following Trudeau's resignation. "Every Liberal MP and Leadership contender supported EVERYTHING Trudeau did for 9 years, and now they want to trick voters by swapping in another Liberal face to keep ripping off Canadians for another 4 years, just like Justin," Poilievre wrote on X. Trudeau, 53, had faced growing calls to quit from inside his Liberal Party, which ramped up in December when deputy prime minister and long-time ally Chrystia Freeland abruptly resigned. In a public resignation letter, Freeland cited US President-elect Donald Trump's threats of tariffs on Canadian goods, and accused Trudeau of not doing enough to address the "grave challenge" posed by Trump's proposals. Trump has promised to impose a tax of 25% on imported Canadian goods - which economists have warned would significantly hurt Canada's economy - unless the country takes steps to increase security on its shared border.

Watch: Trudeau’s nine years as Canada's prime minister... in 85 seconds

Trudeau said Monday that he had hoped Freeland would have continued as deputy prime minister, "but she chose otherwise". Canada has since announced that it will implement sweeping new security measures along the country's US border in response to the threat. In an online post, Trump claimed that pressure over tariffs led to Trudeau's resignation and repeated his jibe that Canada should become "the 51st State". "If Canada merged with the U.S., there would be no Tariffs, taxes would go way down, and they would be TOTALLY SECURE from the threat of the Russian and Chinese Ships that are constantly surrounding them," he wrote. Since 2019, the Liberal Party has governed as a minority party. Following Freeland's resignation, Trudeau lost the backing of parties that had previously helped keep the Liberals in power - the left-leaning New Democrats, who had a support agreement with the Liberals, and the Quebec nationalist party, Bloc Quebecois. The largest opposition party, the Conservatives, have maintained a significant two-digit lead over the Liberals in polls for months - suggesting that if a general election were held today, the Liberals could be in for a significant defeat. Liberals will now choose a new leader to take the party into the next election, which must be held on or before 20 October. A senior government official told the BBC that the race is an open contest, and that the Prime Minister's Office will fully stay out of the process, leaving it to Liberal Party members to decide their future. Speaking to reporters, the Bloc Quebecois leader Yves-François Blanchet suggested that an early election be called once the Liberals choose their new leader.

loolem on January 6th, 2025 at 20:09 UTC »

Greetings from Australia just want to acknowledge the fact that we have exactly the same problem here and our left wing government have barely been in power three years. From what I can tell this seems to be a global problem for western governments of gearing their economies for constant population growth without actually incentivising the population to grow in any way. So they do the cheap steroid fix of overwhelming migration and now no one has anywhere to live because this wasn’t planned for. This combined with too low corporate taxes and violà!

I’m not trying to defend this guy, just saying I don’t think the party of corporate elites and low taxes probably aren’t gonna solve this.

daveashaw on January 6th, 2025 at 17:56 UTC »

Ten years is a long time to lead a nation, given that US presidents generally only serve for eight (under regular circumstances).

Inflation, housing availability, and immigrants increasing demand on a limited supply.

Kind of similar to what is knocking out left and center-left parties/governments across the industrialized world.

happy_zeratul on January 6th, 2025 at 17:02 UTC »

Is there a Canadian out there who can give me the low down on why he is so unpopular?