Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

US & Canada

Canadians to head to the polls

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney holds a press conference at Canada House, in London, Britain, on March 17, 2025.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney holds a press conference at Canada House, in London, Britain, on March 17, 2025.

REUTERS/Carlos Osorio

New Prime Minister Mark Carney is expected to call a snap election on Sunday, sending Canadians to the polls on April 28 or May 5. The campaign, taking place against a backdrop of provocations from Donald Trump, is expected to focus on who is best equipped to handle the US president, former central banker Carney or Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.


The Liberals are leading in the polls after an unprecedented 25-point surge since Trump was elected. In the tumultuous period since then, Trudeau was forced out, and Carney took his place, swiftly canceling the consumer carbon tax and thereby removing the two issues Conservatives had built their campaign around. But Poilievre is a veteran, Carney is a political rookie with shaky French, and the electorate is volatile, so the results are unpredictable.

Polling shows Carney — who presided over the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England during economic crises — has an advantage over Poilievre as the candidate best suited to respond to Trump’s threats to Canadian sovereignty, but Poilievre will challenge that. He seized, for instance, on a Fox News interview in which Trump said he would rather deal with a Liberal government. Poilievre is already delivering campaign-style announcements highlighting his party’s plans to aggressively exploit natural resources, and will argue that Carney will continue with Trudeau-era climate policies that constrained development.

Carney has the momentum, though, after a successful trip to Europe, and the Liberals are announcing high-profile candidates, including former Quebec finance minister Carlos Leitão and outgoing GZERO Publisher Evan Solomon.

Because of Trump’s rhetoric, Canadians are already intensely engaged, so the campaign ahead is likely to have a different dynamic than most, where part of the challenge is getting tuned-out voters to pay attention. The wildcard will be Trump, who is promising to bring in tariffs on April 2 that could send Canada into a recession as voters are trying to figure out who can best handle him.

More For You

Can Trump turn the economy around before the midterms?
- YouTube
With midterms approaching, economists say it may be too late for Trump to shift how voters feel about the economy. Economist Scott Lincicome says the White House has limited options. “Other than eliminating a lot of the tariffs, which we know isn't going to happen,” he argues, the administration would need to focus on affordability—things like [...]
What is Trump's exit strategy from Iran?
- YouTube
In this "ask ian," Ian Bremmer explains why the Trump administration may be looking for a way out of the US–Israel war with Iran, even as Israel appears determined to keep fighting.“The easiest way to declare victory is to narrow the war aims,” Ian says, pointing to US goals like destroying Iran’s navy and ballistic missile capabilities.But Israel [...]
Trump bashes globalization, but Americans still buy foreign
- YouTube
“Even in a year of historically high U.S. tariffs, we're still importing tons of goods—really inflation-adjusted records,” he notes. American companies continue investing abroad, foreign companies invest in the US, and interest in global cultures and cuisines remains strong. Paul Krugman adds that while people may say they oppose free trade in [...]
Trump's war of choice in Iran
- YouTube
In this Quick Take, Ian Bremmer examines the second week of the US-Israel war with Iran and warns that the conflict risks spiraling into a longer and more destabilizing situation. [...]