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.
Trudeau’s policies went well beyond Biden’s — he passed a federal carbon-pricing system and successfully defended it against several challenges, something Democrats in the United States have never been able to do.
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.
Conservative Party of Canada Leader Pierre Poilievre pushed back against President-elect Donald Trump’s intent to impose tariffs on Canada, calling on his country to “stand strong” against the United States.
The United States probably won’t annex Canada. But Trump’s imperial dreams are already destabilizing the world.
Pierre Poilievre's views on Bitcoin have sometimes attracted controversy, but a lot has changed over the past three years.
Tory Leader Pierre Poilievre has urged Justin Trudeau to "cut short" the prorogation of Parliament so MPs can.
On Jan. 6, Governor General Mary Simon granted Trudeau his request to prorogue Parliament to allow the Liberals time to pick his successor — a move which may have been unconstitutional. On Jan. 7, Trump said he intended to apply “economic force” to carry out his intention of absorbing Canada as the 51st American state.
Justin Trudeau announced his resignation as Canadian ... Canada's next federal election must take place by October. Pierre Poilievre, the leader of Canada's Conservative Party, is the current ...
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has said he will contest against Justin Trudeau no matter who the new Liberal PM will be, since all of them backed the Canadian PM's policies and stance. He also spoke on what US stands to lose if the tariff threat becomes a reality,
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre again demanded that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau call a national election instead of proroging Parliament.