Why Have
So Many Canadians Turned on Justin Trudeau?
Allies and
opponents alike are calling for him to resign as prime minister.
Ephrat
LivniIan Austen
By Ephrat
Livni and Ian Austen
Dec. 20,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/20/world/americas/justin-trudeau-canada-popularity.html
Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada is under intense pressure to step down after
the abrupt and acrimonious resignation of a key deputy on Monday highlighted
his deep unpopularity after nearly a decade in power.
On Friday,
as Mr. Trudeau tried to save his leadership by rearranging his cabinet, another
prominent political ally turned on him, calling him a failed leader and vowing
to bring down his government.
The ally,
Jagmeet Singh of the New Democratic Party, released a scathing letter promising
to bring a motion to defeat the government in the House of Commons after
Parliament returns from a holiday break next month. According to a new poll by
Ipsos, 73 percent of Canadians think that Mr. Trudeau should resign as leader
of the Liberal Party, including 43 percent of Liberal voters.
Here’s what
to know about Mr. Trudeau’s rise and fall, and what could happen next.
Who is
Justin Trudeau?
Mr. Trudeau
grew up in the spotlight as the son of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, a Canadian prime
minister. In 2015, at age 43, he became Canada’s second-youngest leader after
his Liberal Party won a strong parliamentary majority. Mr. Trudeau was savvy
with social media and enjoyed a long political honeymoon after his election.
(He also had good hair.)
In 2017, Mr.
Trudeau came under pressure to stand up to Donald J. Trump, the newly elected
U.S. president. As Mr. Trump restricted immigration, Mr. Trudeau restated
Canada’s openness to asylum seekers, proclaiming, “Diversity is our strength.”
During his
time in office, Mr. Trudeau prioritized two issues. One was climate change. The
other was reconciliation with Indigenous people, over the generational harms
from a system of boarding schools that were rife with abuse. He also followed
through on a pledge to legalize marijuana.
In 2019, the
Liberals maintained their hold on power with Mr. Trudeau as their leader, but
by a narrower margin, and they failed to secure a majority in Parliament. The
Liberals needed support from smaller parties to advance Mr. Trudeau’s
legislative agenda.
During the
coronavirus pandemic in 2020, Mr. Trudeau became the first Group of 7 leader to
isolate himself, after his wife, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, tested positive for
Covid-19. (The couple are now separated.) The next year, when his approval
ratings were still relatively high, he called a snap election, saying he wanted
a strong mandate for his party to lead Canada out of the pandemic and into
economic recovery.
Voters
returned him to office in 2021, but the Liberals failed again to win a majority
of votes in Parliament. Mr. Trudeau has since faced intense criticism from the
Conservative opposition for some of his pandemic and recovery policies.
Why is his
government unpopular?
Economy:
Canada’s post-pandemic inflation spiked to 8 percent, though it has since
receded below 2 percent. Unemployment remains high, around 6.4 percent. The
Conservative opposition has hammered Mr. Trudeau’s carbon-tax program.
Housing: The
cost of housing in many major Canadian cities has become untenable. An economic
analysis this year found that in Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal, prices would
have to plummet, or incomes would have to improbably soar, to restore
affordability.
Immigration:
In October, Mr. Trudeau said he was tightening Canada’s immigration policies
after the country welcomed nearly three million people over three years,
straining health care and other services. “In the tumultuous times as we
emerged from the pandemic, between addressing labor needs and maintaining
population growth, we didn’t get the balance quite right,” he said.
Scandals: In
2018, Mr. Trudeau was accused of groping a reporter in 2000, an allegation he
rejected. A federal ethics commissioner in 2019 ruled that Mr. Trudeau tried to
circumvent, undermine and discredit his former justice minister and attorney
general, Jody Wilson-Raybould, in connection with a criminal case against
SNC-Lavalin, a multinational engineering and construction firm based in
Montreal. That same year, images surfaced of Mr. Trudeau wearing blackface or
brownface as a student in the 1990s and as a teacher at a private prep school
in 2001.
Infighting:
Mr. Trudeau’s hold on power slipped in September when the left-leaning New
Democratic Party deprived Liberals of guaranteed support needed to pass
legislation. This week, Chrystia Freeland, the deputy prime minister and
finance minister, resigned abruptly, a stinging rebuke to Mr. Trudeau.
What will
happen if Mr. Trudeau resigns?
If he steps
down as party leader, he will no longer be prime minister. But how he might
step down matters.
Mr. Trudeau
has two options: He can say that he will step down when the party has a new
leader, some weeks or months in the future.
Or he can
step down immediately. In that case, the party would appoint an interim leader,
who then could not run for the leadership under Liberal Party rules.
The next
step would be to head to a federal election under the new Liberal leadership.
Canada’s next election must be held by October 2025, but a vote could be called
or forced earlier.
The next
federal election could be set off at any point through two means. Mr. Trudeau
has the power to dissolve Parliament at any time, and that would lead to an
election. Or, if the opposition were to defeat the Liberal government through a
confidence motion or vote down a budget bill, the government would fall, and an
election would follow.
Who are the
top contenders to succeed him?
Conservatives:
Pierre Poilievre has led the Conservative Party since 2022, branding himself as
the anti-Trudeau, practical and down-to-earth. He supported a blockade of
Canada’s capital, Ottawa, in 2022 led by truckers who opposed vaccine mandates
and pandemic restrictions. Mr. Poilievre has been eyeing the top government
spot since at least 1999, when as a university student he wrote an essay that
won a cash prize about what he would do as prime minister.
Liberals:
After her resignation this week, there was widespread speculation that Chrystia
Freeland, the former deputy prime minister and finance minister, would start
her own bid to run the Liberal Party. Other contenders include Dominic LeBlanc,
who became finance minister when Ms. Freeland resigned; Mélanie Joly, Canada’s
top diplomat since 2021; and Mark Carney, the former governor of the Bank of
Canada who also led the Bank of England.
Matina
Stevis-Gridneff contributed reporting.
Ephrat Livni
is a reporter for The Times’s DealBook newsletter, based in Washington. More
about Ephrat Livni
Ian Austen
reports on Canada for The Times based in Ottawa. He covers politics, culture
and the people of Canada and has reported on the country for two decades. He
can be reached at austen@nytimes.com. More about Ian Austen
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