Wednesday , February 26 2025

Candidates to replace Canada’s Trudeau focus on Trump

26-02-2025

OTTAWA: The leading candidates vying to replace Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spent considerable time during a televised debate on Monday discussing the need to stand up to US President Donald Trump.

The next election must be held by October 20 this year and until recently the official opposition Conservatives looked set for an easy win after more than nine years of Liberal rule but the race now is much closer, thanks to Trump’s threats to impose tariffs on all imports from Canada.

“Trump represents the biggest threat to Canada since World War Two,” former finance minister Chrystia Freeland said during a two-hour French-language debate between the four candidates.

Freeland, who helped negotiate the US-Canada-Mexico trade deal during the first Trump administration, said the president at that point had vowed to wage economic war against Canada but “this time Trump’s threats are worse, he wants to make Canada the 51st state,” she added. Canada sends 75% of its goods and services exports to the United States and would be plunged into a recession if the tariffs persisted.

Ex-central banker Mark Carney, who polls indicate is the front-runner, said Trump would never succeed in making good his threat to make Canada a part of the United States.

“At this moment Canada is facing the worst crisis of our lives … I know how to handle crises,” he said. Carney headed the Bank of Canada during the 2008-2009 financial meltdown and then the Bank of England during the Brexit vote.

Carney and Freeland both say Canada needs to respond robustly to any Trump tariffs.

Freeland’s resignation last December after nine years in cabinet triggered a crisis that eventually forced Trudeau to announce last month that he would step down. The new leader will be named on March 9.

The Conservatives, who say there is no difference between Trudeau and the two main leadership contenders, issued a news release earlier in the day entitled “Sneaky Carney Must Come Clean With Canadians”.

The two remaining candidates are former cabinet minister Karina Gould and retired Liberal legislator Frank Baylis.

The four will hold a debate in English, the other of Canada’s official languages, on Tuesday.

Last month, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said he would step down in the coming months after nine years in power, bowing to pressure from lawmakers alarmed by his Liberal Party’s miserable showing in pre-election polls.

A subdued Trudeau, among the most prominent progressive leaders in the world, told a press conference that he would stay on both as prime minister and Liberal leader until the party chooses a new chief within months.

“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,” Trudeau said.

He also announced parliament would be prorogued, or suspended, until March 24.

That means an election is unlikely before May at the earliest, so Trudeau will remain in charge at least initially of dealing with the threat of crippling tariffs once US President-elect Donald Trump takes office on Jan. 20.

The next election must be held by Oct. 20 and polls show voters angry over high prices and a shortage of affordable housing will elect the opposition Conservatives and hand the Liberals a resounding defeat, no matter who leads the party. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

Check Also

Apple commits to $500bn US investment

26-02-2025 CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIA: Apple plans to invest more than $500bn (£396bn) in the US over …