Trudeau and 12 of Canada’s 13 premiers agreed to form a united front and pledge that “everything” is on the table in a potential tariff war with Donald Trump.
Pierre Poilievre's views on Bitcoin have sometimes attracted controversy, but a lot has changed over the past three years.
Pierre Poilievre’s recent 100-minute interview with controversial media commentator, Jordan Peterson, provided some clues about the Conservative leader’s political ideology.
The Conservative Party of Canada leader warned that Canada cannot afford “economically destructive, liberal taxes," as this would only drive more businesses away.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre issued the following statement following Justin Trudeau’s resignation as Liberal leader. The prime minister has asked the Governor General to prorogue Parliament so a new Liberal leader can be chosen. Watch the video or read the full text of Poilievre’s statement:
Like Trump to the south, Poilievre believes energy — both renewable and fossil fuels — can create jobs and rescue the economy. But he also argues Canada’s abundance of oil is “underpriced’ and underulitilised in geopolitics because there is only one pipeline that does not head straight to the US.
Like Jordan Peterson, whose recent interview with Poilievre has garnered 42 million views on X since it was posted Jan. 2 on YouTube, Poilievre is a native of Alberta, Canada’s most conservative province. Married since 2017 to his Venezuelan-born wife Anaida, he lives in in Ottawa, where the couple are raising their two young children.
Justin Trudeau's successor as Liberal leader and Canada's prime minister will soon face a bruising election against a sharp-tongued populist riding a wave of anti-Trudeau sentiment.
With PM Justin Trudeau announcing his resignation and an election likely soon, attention turns to Canada’s next leader. In this race, Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre emerges as the frontrunner,
OTTAWA — Former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney officially kicked off his bid to replace Justin Trudeau on Thursday by launching barbs at Pierre
Paul St-Pierre Plamondon lumped the two together as bad news for everything from immigration to health transfer payments.
He oversaw cannabis legalization and harm reduction expansion, but did far too little on the OD crisis. What follows him could be worse.