Connect with us

News

Trump looms over Canada’s election

campaigns begin towards April 28

Published

on

Carney, Canadian PM

Trump, since his secondcoming as the President of the US., has indeed impacted on many european countries.

Canada is one of those countries.

According to BBC News, Canada’s newly appointed Prime Minister Mark Carney has called a snap election.

Carney has thus sent the country to the polls on 28 April.

The election comes as Canada faces a trade war with the US and calls from President Donald Trump for it to become the 51st American state.

These are issues which are expected to be top of mind for voters.

It also comes nine days after Carney, a Liberal, was sworn in as Canada’s prime minister following Justin Trudeau’s resignation.

Carney must now face Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, whose party had been leading in national polls since mid-2023.

Although recent polls suggest the race is now neck-and-neck.

The two main candidates held their first rallies on Sunday.

In St John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador, Carney addressed the threat of US tariffs.

He repeated a favoured sporting analogy: “In this trade war, just like in hockey, we will win.”

Speaking in Ottawa earlier that day, Carney said he needed a clear, positive mandate to deal with Trump.

“We are facing the most significant crisis of our lifetimes because of President Trump’s unjustified trade actions and his threats to our sovereignty,” he said.

In a rally of his own in Toronto on Sunday evening, Poilievre said Carney’s party was failing to offer change.

Poilievre added that Carney’s party was simply making the same promises that they’ve been breaking for over 10 years.

See also  Deadly storm tears through US: at least 16 people dead.

The Liberals, once written off for this election, now have a chance of forming a government for the fourth consecutive time under Carney.

Carney, 60, the former governor of the Bank of England and the Bank of Canada, has never served as an MP and is untested politically.

Carney made the most of his short days in office, meeting with UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron.

He also stopped in Canada’s Arctic to announce a partnership with Australia to develop a new northern radar system.

Carney also ended Trudeau’s signature carbon tax climate policy, which had faced heavy criticism by the Conservatives.

Now he will face the general electorate, which is concerned about Canada’s rapidly shifting relationship with the US.

US. is Canada’s historically close ally.

Carney will also face the country’s high cost of living.

In a campaign launch shortly before the election call, Poilievre, 45, sought to link Carney to the Liberals under Trudeau.

Trudeau had left office as a deeply unpopular leader.

He called Trudeau’s time in office a “lost Liberal decade”.

Poilievre accused the party of weakening the country by blocking resource development, failing to fund the military, and mismanaging immigration and the economy.

He said the party’s “post-national globalist ideology” made Canada more vulnerable to Trump’s trade war.

President Trump’s current and threatened tariffs on Canadian goods could usher in economic instability in the country.

Also, according to Poilievre, the threatened tariffs could push Canada towards a recession.

Trump placed 25% tariffs on Canadian goods on 2 March before partially pausing them for a month.

See also  Federal Judge halts Trump's executive order

On 12 March, a blanket 25% duty on all aluminium and steel imports went into effect, hitting Canadian importers.

The Trump administration plans further global tariffs on 2 April, in the campaign’s second week.

Canada has retaliated so far with tariffs on about C$60bn ($42bn; £32bn) worth of US goods.

Carney on Sunday called the trade war with the US one of the “most significant threats of our lifetimes”.

Referring to Trump, he said: “He wants to break us so America will own us. We will not let that happen.”

Carney has promised further retaliation, though he has conceded there is a limit to Canada’s tariff response given the different size of the two economies.

Poilievre said that Canada must respond firmly to threats from the White House.

“We have to convert our anger and our anxiety into action,” he said.

“We have to become strong, self-reliant and sovereign to stand up to the Americans,” he added.

The campaign will last just five weeks – the shortest allowed.

Besides the US-Canada relationship, much of the focus will be on the economy, including cost-of-living issues.

In the Canadian federal election, voters do not cast a ballot directly for a prime minister.

Instead, the leader of the party with the most members of parliament traditionally becomes PM.

Four main parties will contest the election:

  • the Liberals,
  • the Conservatives,
  • the New Democrats (NDP) and,
  • the Bloc Québécois, who only run candidates in the French-speaking province of Quebec with a focus on their regional interests.

The Green Party and the People’s Party of Canada are also in the running.

See also  Leeds win English Championship; Luton relegated

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh said on Sunday that neither Carney nor Poilievre are the right choices for Canada, accusing them of protecting the wealthy, not ordinary Canadians.

“You deserve a prime minister you can trust to make decisions in your best interest,” he said.

The Bloc is facing pressure from a surge of support for the Liberals in Quebec.

Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet pitched his party as a voice for industries in Trump’s sights.

The industries range from aluminium to dairy and lumber, which are all significant in the province.

The Greens for the first time are running with co-leaders: Jonathan Pedneault and Elizabeth May.

“We must vote now as though our country depends on it, because more than ever before, it does,” said Pedneault on Sunday.

At dissolution of Parliament at the time the election was called, the Liberals held 153 seats in the House of Commons.

The Conservatives were the official opposition with 120 seats.

The Bloc had 33 seats, the NDP had 24 and the Green Party held two.

 


For Diaspora Digital Media Updates click on Whatsapp, or Telegram. For eyewitness accounts/ reports/ articles, write to: citizenreports@diasporadigitalmedia.com. Follow us on X (Fomerly Twitter) or Facebook

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest from DDM TV

Latest Updates

INNOSON VEHICLE MANUFACTURING

CBEX restores wallet balances of subscribers

UK mum in tears as baby diagnosed with rare genetic condition that has no name

“No judiciary in 2027”: Nigerians reject courts over electoral injustice

Top High-Paying Nigerian Jobs Without University Degree in 2025

Man ends it after 12-year search for $742M lost Bitcoin hard drive

EU adds Monaco and 5 African countries to Blacklist for financial crimes, removes UAE

REVEALED: How Tinubu “killed” Jesutega Onokpasa — Frank Tietie

Open Letter to Atiku Abubakar on the Essence of Sacrifices

PDP bleeds as 12 lawmakers, govs defect to APC

Bellingham joins Borussia Dortmund in Record transfer deal

Subscribe to DDM Newsletter for Latest News

Get Notifications from DDM News Yes please No thanks