UN Canada to head to polls as Mark Carney calls snap election for 28 April - Prime minister launches contest expected to focus on US relations, as Liberals enjoy lead over Conservatives

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We are facing the most significant crisis of our lifetime because of President Trump’s unjustified trade actions and his threats to our sovereignty,’ said Carney. Photograph: Adrian Wyld/AP

Canada’s prime minister, Mark Carney, has called a snap election on 28 April, firing the starting gun on a contest that is widely expected to focus on the strained relationship with the US amid threats to Canada’s economic and political future.

“We are facing the most significant crisis of our lifetime because of President Trump’s unjustified trade actions and his threats to our sovereignty,” he said. “He wants to break us, so America can own us. We will not let this happen. We’re over the shock the shock of the betrayal, but we can never forget the lessons. We have to look out for ourselves. We have to look out for each other.”

Moments before, Carney met the governor general, Mary Simon, requesting she dissolve the country’s 44th parliament and call an election. Under federal law, the minimum length of a campaign is 37 days.

By calling the snap election in search of a “strong, positive mandate”, Carney does not have to face a hostile parliament – a showdown complicated by the fact that he doesn’t have a seat in the House of Commons. Parliament had been due to return on Monday after being prorogued for two months, following former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s resignation announcement in early January.

Carney’s decision comes as the Liberals experience an unprecedented swing in the polls that has now put them ahead of the Conservatives, with some projecting the party has enough support nationally to form a majority government.

Prior to the dissolution of parliament, the incumbent Liberals held 152 seats in the House of Commons. The Conservatives had 120, the Bloc Québécois 33, the NDP 24, and the Green party two.

“Carney has been the gamechanger and has totally reversed the fortunes of the Liberal party,” said Lori Turnbull, the director of Dalhousie University’s school of public administration. “And increasingly, this election is not really about the parties any more, or the brands they represent. We don’t elect our prime minister directly, but the feeling increasingly is that people are poised to vote for the leader they want to see as prime minister.”

Numerous surveys from polling firms suggest Canadians view Carney as more capable than the Conservative leader, Pierre Poilievre, in handling economic turbulence, trade talks and relations with a hostile and unpredictable White House

Donald Trump has figured prominently into Canada’s political narrative, repeatedly threatening to wage economic war on the US’s closest ally and one of its largest trading partners, with the end goal of annexing the country’s northern neighbour.

Those threats, and the prospect of painful tariffs on Canadian goods, have electrified the country, with a groundswell of patriotism, calls to boycott American goods and an “elbows up” rallying cry.

“The election will certainly have a ballot question. But it isn’t Trump, it’s uncertainty. Trump is a symbol of that he’s showing how Canada is vulnerable in many ways. People want a leader who can be the antidote to that uncertainty,” said Turnbull. “And if you look at poll after poll, people believe Carney offers something, in this moment, that Canadians need.”

If the Liberals emerge victorious in April, it will be remembered as the largest political comeback in the country’s history – and for the Conservatives, a catastrophic loss of an election result that until recently was certain to fall in their favour.

As early as 2023, CBC’s polling aggregator had the Tory chance at electoral victory at 99% – a seemingly insurmountable edge they maintained until mid February 2025. But a series of confounding factors, including the resignation of Trudeau, threats by Trump to annex Canada and the rapid ascension of Carney as the new Liberal leader, has dramatically shifted the political landscape.

Turnbull said: “Conservatives seem to be falling short in saying the things that connect with how Canadians are feeling. A few months ago, Poilievre was talking about affordability and housing, issues that the Liberals were tonedeaf on. But now, he’s somehow absent. The Conservatives are keeping the same messaging, even though Canadians have shifted.

“They may be trying to convince themselves that that Carney is on a honeymoon, and if they just stick to their their notes, the polls will go back to some version of what they were before, and then they’ll cross the finish line first.”

Poilievre has framed his party’s campaign as a “Canada first” platform. On Sunday, he told reporters at his campaign launch: “Trump has been very blunt that he wants a weak Canada that he can target … Electing Liberals will weaken our country still.” He added that Canada “will never be an American state; we will always be a sovereign and self-reliant country”.

The Conservatives, without Trudeau as a political punching bag, say Carney is largely responsible for the country’s slow growth in recent years, given his role as economic adviser to the Liberal party. They call him “sneaky Carney” and allege he plans to bring back a controversial carbon tax he removed in his first day as prime minister.

“That whole strategy rests on being able to define Carney. And if they could do that, then their strategy would probably work,” said Turnbull. “But that’s not working. Voters, in poll after poll, are not accepting the Conservatives definition of who Mark Carney is. And that will matter in the coming weeks.”

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  • Lunacy
Reactions: Coo Coo Bird
Not a shock

For the first time in over a year the incumbent Liberals have a tiny lead over the Conservatives so it makes sense to push it now rather then risk Canadians waking up and remembering that it was the Liberal government and not Trump that caused all of Canada's woes.
 
Do they campaign on specific issues in Canada, or just vague "we're not America but support all forms of G.A.E." notions? Because I don't see what policies they'd want to discuss or expect any support for.

Infinity more Indians, $30/lb. steaks, endless hikes in energy bills for "green" vanity projects...is there anything they can point to that hasn't been a shitshow?
 
Not a shock

For the first time in over a year the incumbent Liberals have a tiny lead over the Conservatives so it makes sense to push it now rather then risk Canadians waking up and remembering that it was the Liberal government and not Trump that caused all of Canada's woes.
Yeah and I wish then Carney do a big misstep similar to what John Turner did in the Canadian elections of 1984.
 
  • Optimistic
Reactions: Ghostse
Do they campaign on specific issues in Canada, or just vague "we're not America but support all forms of G.A.E." notions? Because I don't see what policies they'd want to discuss or expect any support for.

Infinity more Indians, $30/lb. steaks, endless hikes in energy bills for "green" vanity projects...is there anything they can point to that hasn't been a shitshow?
Liberals scream about abortion, and the Cons cutting healthcare. That is a typical Canadian election campaign.

The Liberals basically run against the American Republican party, mostly railing about things happening south of the border. Canadian's want to be like Democrats and vote Liberal no matter what, while demanding we implement every awful policy the Democrat party puts forward. While shrieking about how they aren't American.

The Cons are afraid to run on anything, even slightly right because they can't handle the almost entirely government funded media shrieking and calling them whatever Republican bogey man south of the border the media is angry about at the time. Scheer and O'Toole lost very winnable elections against an incompetent and corrupt Liberal party because they refused to campaign on anything. Poilievre has done the same, by hiding in his basement and being quiet for the last several years. He isn't giving anyone anything to latch on to. He's promising business as usual, so infinity jeets, but no carbon tax.

Carney is probably going to eke out a win, based on the Canadian terminal TDS. By June they will realize they got tricked and Carney is just like Trudeau, just as corrupt, just as hostile to the nation. They'll rant, rave, stamp their feet and scream, blaming everyone but themselves for the sorry state of affairs the country is in.

At the end of the day Carney will most likely fold to Trump give him what he wants, and Canadian media will pretend like we won.
 
The Liberals basically run against the American Republican party
This reminds me of that line about how (American) Leftists don't have international enemies, they have proxies for domestic enemies. Russians are MAGA-hat wearing troonsphobes, etc. Except for Canada I guess there are too few conservatives and the Shitlibs live too far away from them in their bughives, so they just use Middle America as their proxy.

By June they will realize they got tricked and Carney is just like Trudeau, just as corrupt, just as hostile to the nation
For anyone normal, I don't see how you forget all the stuff that made Trudeau so unpopular, or somehow think the successor in the same party won't continue or double down on all of it. Is there any attempt at a coherent "here's why it'll be different" explanation? Or just "vote blue no matter who" mentality?
 
This reminds me of that line about how (American) Leftists don't have international enemies, they have proxies for domestic enemies. Russians are MAGA-hat wearing troonsphobes, etc. Except for Canada I guess there are too few conservatives and the Shitlibs live too far away from them in their bughives, so they just use Middle America as their proxy.


For anyone normal, I don't see how you forget all the stuff that made Trudeau so unpopular, or somehow think the successor in the same party won't continue or double down on all of it. Is there any attempt at a coherent "here's why it'll be different" explanation? Or just "vote blue no matter who" mentality?
Typically Alberta is used as the domestic enemy that must be crushed at all costs. They get labeled as American, or Canada's Texas. Most Canadians don't consume local news, and most are atomized within their communities. On top of that most Canadians don't understand how their government works, or separation of powers. Canadian media is also terrible, and no one watches it over American media. So you have a ton of people in the cities, who are culturally American, but without the stabilizing benefit of living in the US to see that the media is bullshit. Imagine a place where most people treat CNN as gospel.

As for the Liberals, this isn't the first time they have done this. The Ontario Liberal Party, which is where most of their staffers came from pulled this a decade ago. Dalton McGuinty was Premier of Ontario, and wholly corrupt so they switched him out with a lesbian who looked like Orville Redenbacher at the last minute. They won another election, the government was just as bad as before, if not worse. Then they lost the one after that.

It really is just ABC Anything but Conservative for a lot of people. Canadian's always get fucked over by the Liberals and their penchant for corruption and contempt for the nation. They call it Liberal arrogance. Then every election vote for more of the same, because they want to spite the Americans.
 
Not a shock

For the first time in over a year the incumbent Liberals have a tiny lead over the Conservatives so it makes sense to push it now rather then risk Canadians waking up and remembering that it was the Liberal government and not Trump that caused all of Canada's woes.
were probably getting another fucking 4 years of libs because of "fuck you trump" sentiment. To be fair though cons have only themselves to blame for looking weak since poilievre does nothing productive but bash on libs.
 
yeah hold on just lemme trust polls cooked up by The Guardian to tell us how the left-wing party is doing *huffs jenkem* ahh there we go, good and retarded.

Poilievre is looking weak right now because for several months the CPC couldn't fire back at the Libs due to the Libs not actually having a leader to criticize. It would be nice if the CPC would say that out loud but they all are deeply in love with the gay political hijinks that happen in Ottawa.
 
No shit. The Canadian conservatives didn't do nearly enough to separate themselves from the guy who keeps talking about how he wants to take over Canada. As a result they'll most likely seize defeat from the jaws of near certain victory.
 
  • Disagree
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“Carney has been the gamechanger and has totally reversed the fortunes of the Liberal party,” said Lori Turnbull, the director of Dalhousie University’s school of public administration. “And increasingly, this election is not really about the parties any more, or the brands they represent.
If this fucking country elects Trudeau's party yet again after the absolute rape this country endured for the past ten years, I will lose my fucking mind.

I had to listen to the boorish display of booing during the Star Spangled Banner the other day at the Leafs game against the Panthers... never been so ashamed to be part of this "first post-national state". I already planned to check out NC, SC, TX and GA this summer to decide if that would be a better fit for my family (E1/E2 visa), but if they elect this fucking Trudeau-lite charlatan, I am moving up my timetable.
 
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