Justin Trudeau announces plan to quit as Canada’s prime minister

Mon, 06 Jan 2025, 16:37
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Justin Trudeau has said he will step down as Canada’s prime minister after his party has finds a new leader, a decision that in effect brings an end to nearly a decade in power.

“Canadians deserve a clear choice in the next election,” Trudeau said, adding party infighting had made it impossible for him to face off against his political rivals. Trudeau said would stay on as prime minister until a new leader of the ruling Liberal party was chosen through a “robust, nationwide” process.

His resignation throws open the doors to a fierce political battle to be the country’s next leader, with polls showing the Liberals losing badly to the official opposition Conservatives in an election that must be held by late October, regardless of who the leader is.

Trudeau used his address to recount his government’s accomplishments over three terms.

Earlier in the day, he met the governor general, Mary Simon, and requested the prorogation of parliament until 24 March in order to give the party sufficient time to find a new leader. Lawmakers were due to return in late January and the opposition Conservatives had pledged to bring down the government with a vote of non-confidence, which could have forced an election.

A meeting of the national caucus is expected to take place later in the day in order to plan for the transition to a new leader.

The 53-year-old Trudeau has led the ruling Liberal party since 2013 and became prime minister in November 2015. Until recently, he had told reporters on numerous occasions he expected to lead the Liberals into the next election.

But the recent developments reflect Trudeau’s waning popularity – and that of his governing Liberals. In recent months, the party has after lost both political strongholds in recent byelections and prominent cabinet ministers. Recent polling has the Liberals at 16% support, their worst pre-election standing in more than a century.

For Trudeau, the reversal of fortunes has been in the works for years as the public slowly soured on a leader whose historic surname, good looks and charisma elevated him into a global celebrity, or, as a 2016 Vogue

profile

put it, the “new young face of Canadian politics”.

At home, however, his reputation has – like those of many incumbents in power over the past year – become increasingly tarnished by high inflation and

out-of-control housing prices

.

But a leader seemingly attuned to the mood of the country found himself embroiled in series of personal scandals, including a

family trip

to the Aga Khan’s private island,

skipping out

on the country’s first national day of truth and reconciliation for a surfing vacation, and revelations that members of his family were

paid hundreds of thousands of dollars

by a charity to which his government recently awarded a substantial contract.

In each case, Trudeau’s apparent inability to understand public outrage helps to explain his refusal to step down – and seemingly blinded him to the growing dissatisfaction which threatens to cast a shadow over his political legacy.

Almost two dozen backbench Liberal MPs signed a letter calling on

Trudeau to step down

late last year over fears of a potentially seismic electoral defeat.

In mid-December Trudeau’s closest political ally, former finance minister Chrystia Freeland,

stepped down

amid a row over the appropriate response to

Donald Trump

’s looming

economic nationalism

. Her scathing resignation letter accused Trudeau of “costly political gimmicks” and cast doubt on his understanding of the “gravity of the moment”.

A deep anxiety has settled over federal politics ahead of Trump’s inauguration, as officials fear American tariffs would devastate the Canadian economy and a prorogued parliament is likely to further entrench those fears.

Trudeau had attempted to placate the incoming US president with a visit to Florida, where they

posed for a smiling photo

, and he told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that he promised Trump Canada would shore up border security.

Days later, however, Trump publicly mocked Trudeau, belittling him as the “governor” of

Canada

, as if his country were merely a US state rather than an independent nation, and musing that it could become part of the US.

The Conservative leader, Pierre Poilievre, has

repeated his calls for an immediate election

, saying: “The government of Canada is itself spiralling out of control.”

Federal law requires an election be held by October 2025 but with all opposition parties saying publicly they no longer have confidence in the governing Liberals, an election is certain when parliament returns in late March.

The Tories are expected to win a majority government given current polling. But that result could sway substantially depending on the new leaders the Liberals choose.

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