Bruised by fresh loss, Canada’s Trudeau shows no sign of stepping down
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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau seems determined to cling to office ahead of a looming national vote.
PHOTO: REUTERS
OTTAWA - Doubts about the leadership of Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau intensified after his ruling Liberal Party suffered a second humiliating loss in a special election,
The Liberals, who have governed for almost nine years, suffered a narrow defeat on Sept 16 in a Montreal constituency that had been one of the party’s safest seats.
The loss, following a defeat in Toronto in late June, reinforced the perception that Liberal prospects in the next national election are dim.
The mandate for Mr Trudeau’s minority government expires at the end of October 2025, but an early election has become increasingly likely after the smaller New Democratic Party (NDP) dropped its support.
Even so, Mr Trudeau showed no sign on Sept 17 that he may step down before the next election campaign. And the party’s mechanisms to force him out are limited.
University of Toronto’s assistant professor of political science Andrew McDougall said the Liberals were losing “the crown jewels” in urban strongholds, not marginal seats, highlighting the party’s bleak prospects.
“This is obviously a very difficult moment for Justin Trudeau,” Prof McDougall said. “It seems to reinforce the narrative that he’s yesterday’s man, and that if the Liberals are going to win the next election, they’re going to have to do it with somebody else.”
Although polls indicate that the Liberals will lose badly to the official opposition right-of-centre Conservatives in the next election amid unhappiness over inflation and a housing crisis, Mr Trudeau and his closest aides say he is going nowhere and has time to help the party recover.
The Prime Minister told reporters on Sept 17: “Obviously, it would have been nicer to be able to win... but there is more work to do, and we’re going to stay focused on doing it.”
His main immediate challenge is that he has lost control of the House of Commons, where the Liberals hold only a minority of seats.
The left-leaning NDP signed a deal in 2022 to keep the Liberals in power but tore up the agreement in September.
The NDP increased its share of the vote in Montreal while retaining a seat in the western province of Manitoba, fending off a strong Conservative challenge.
The Liberals face a number of confidence votes by legislators in the next few months and a defeat would trigger an election, although the NDP may choose to keep the government afloat until it can buoy its own popularity.
Mr Darrell Bricker, chief executive of polling firm Ipsos-Reid, said: “The Liberals gave both opposition parties a reason to believe that they can defeat Trudeau. The potential they can trigger (an election) sooner is definitely there.”
Keeping a minority government alive can be difficult, and how much Mr Trudeau can press ahead with his legislative agenda remains unclear.
The Liberals said on Sept 16 that they would focus on legislation regarding defence and citizenship.
Special convention
Unlike in the United States, where President Joe Biden stepped down as the Democratic presidential candidate in favour of Vice-President Kamala Harris, there is no smooth way for Mr Trudeau to hand over power.
In Australia and Britain, prime ministers are chosen by legislators and can be quickly overthrown. Mr Trudeau was selected by a special convention of party members and cannot be forced out if he wants to stay.
One senior Liberal said that if the polls continued to look miserable, senior ministers could urge Mr Trudeau to leave.
But the Liberal, who requested anonymity given the sensitivity of the situation, said there was no guarantee that Mr Trudeau – a stubborn man, according to insiders – would listen.
Mr Bricker said those in charge of Liberal fund raising could make the same pitch to Mr Trudeau.
“If the money dries up, they are not in a position to fight,” he said.
If Mr Trudeau steps down, an interim leader would be chosen while the party sets up another convention.
Tradition dictates that a stand-in must come from the ranks of legislators, ruling out former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney, often mentioned as a potential Trudeau replacement.
The interim leader does not run to be the permanent replacement, according to party custom. That could deter Cabinet heavyweights such as Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland and Innovation Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne from seeking to replace Mr Trudeau in the short term.
Regardless, changing leaders might not boost Liberal prospects, said Mr Frank Graves, president of polling firm Ekos.
“The difficulties Mr Trudeau and the Liberals are experiencing are pretty similar to those progressive incumbents are experiencing in other advanced Western democracies,” he said by e-mail, citing rising populism and economic uncertainty. REUTERS


