By suspending Parliament and promising to resign, the prime minister bought the Liberals time. But Canada will now face Donald J. Trump with a lame duck in charge.
Cabinet ministers, a former central banker and a one-time provincial premier are all reportedly eyeing the top job.
Vote in our daily poll! No matter who heads up the Liberal Party of Canada after its leadership race, people will almost certainly be treated to Justin Trudeau 2.0. It seems that the current favourite (including Trudeau’s pet pick) is Mark Carney,
Canada's ruling Liberal Party is looking for a new leader to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who announced on Monday he intended to step down.
Chrystia Freeland, the former deputy prime minister, sought to distance herself from Mr. Trudeau in a public letter criticizing him for “costly political gimmicks.”
Liberals MPs will debate Wednesday what rules they want to see in a coming leadership race as the field to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau sees more expressions of interest
Freeland, who was one of Trudeau's closest political allies for a decade, quit last month after resisting his demands for more spending and wrote a letter denouncing his governing style.
With Trudeau’s nine-year stint as prime minister ending, several politicians are frontrunners to take over his role
Prominent banker Mark Carney is launching a bid to lead Canada ’s ruling Liberal Party, he said Thursday, after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau resigned his position as head of the party.
Trudeau’s departure is more embarrassing because it follows a bungled attempt to lay all the responsibility for a failed economic policy on his
NEXT MAN UP — Liberal leadership hopeful MARK CARNEY fired off a statement at 11:12 p.m. that called Trump’s tariffs, if implemented, a “blatant violation of our trade agreements” that “will demand the most serious trade response in our history.”
The only person more toxic to Liberals than Donald Trump right now appears to be Justin Trudeau. Liberal MPs and leadership contenders are falling over themselves to outdo Conservative opposition leader Pierre Poilievre in dumping on the prime minister and his past policies.