The political landscape is experiencing a notable shift towards conservative leadership, with recent developments in Canada and Germany highlighting this trend.
“The Jewish people are the only people I know of who, in the same language, worship the same faith on the same land in the same country as they did 3,000 years ago,” Pierre Poilievre, the ...
Pierre Poilievre, the man widely tipped to become Canada’s next leader following Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s shock exit, is a firebrand conservative who has long vowed to save the country ...
A man who has drawn comparisons to Donald Trump will become Canada’s Prime Minister. Pierre Poilievre, the leader of the opposition Conservative Party, is on track to decisively win an election ...
1:48 Poilievre says carbon tax will help Trump move Canadian business south of the border Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says his focus in the next federal election will be on ending the ...
At 20 years old, Pierre Poilievre already had a roadmap for Canada. Canada's Conservative Party leader - now 45 - laid out a low-tax, small government vision for the country in an essay contest on ...
OTTAWA, Canada — With Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s announcement on Monday morning that he will step down as Liberal Party leader, whoever succeeds him will face Official Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre, whose Conservative Party has ...
President-elect boasts international group of Right-wing proxies with equally provocative styles and a hostility toward migrants and wokery
Global elections in 2025: 2025 will see significant elections worldwide, including in Delhi, Germany, Canada, Bolivia, and Australia, shaping global politics.
Comment: The flow-on effects from some significant elections this year could have wide regional and global implications The post Global elections to watch in 2025 appeared first on Newsroom.
The world, it seems, has turned on governments whose championing of so-called progressive policies is now viewed by voters as out of touch.
London and Tokyo saw it happen in 2024; Berlin and Canberra will see it happen in early 2025. The post-pandemic landscape has seen incumbent governments across the world suffer the wrath of the voter as frustrations over the cost of living crisis and what the recently-departed Jimmy Carter dubbed a “crisis of confidence” boiled over.