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Pierre Marcel Poilievre PC MP (/ ˌ p ɔː l i ˈ ɛ v / PAW-lee-EV; [3] [4] born June 3, 1979) is a Canadian politician who has been the leader of the Conservative Party and of the Official Opposition since 2022. Poilievre was born in Calgary, Alberta. He studied at the University of Calgary, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in international ...
Poilievre is pro-choice on abortion, [90] and says a government led by him will not bring forward and will not pass laws to restrict abortion, but he will allow his party to have free votes on legislation. [157] Poilievre plans to repeal Bill C-11 and the successor to Bill C-36, describing them as censorship. [158] [159] [160]
Graduate of Carleton University's renowned School of Journalism. Shannon Kramer; Matthew Luloff - Canadian Forces veteran, served in Afghanistan, formerly worked for several Members of Parliament and most recently for the Minister of National Defence. Holds a degree in Public Affairs and Policy Management. Mental Health advocate.
The following is the individual results for the 2021 Canadian federal ... Pierre Poilievre 35,356 49.89%: Kevin Hua 8,164 ... University—Rosedale: Chrystia Freeland
It has been represented by Pierre Poilievre, the current Leader of the Opposition, since its creation in 2015. The original riding was created by the British North America Act of 1867. However, the riding had existed since 1821 in the Parliament of Upper Canada and the Parliament of the Province of Canada. It originally consisted of Carleton ...
Pages in category "Pierre Poilievre" ... Anaida Poilievre This page was last edited on 14 November 2024, at 09:22 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
While a student at the University of Calgary, he became friends with current Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre. They reportedly within the university's Reform Party campus club. [5] In 2019, it was revealed that Majumdar name was mentioned as an organizer in the "Kamikaze campaign" scandal.
Poilievre won the leadership election in a landslide, carrying 330 of 338 ridings with at least a plurality. The only other candidate to win a plurality in any ridings was Jean Charest , whose support mostly came from Quebec , though Poilievre still won 72 of the province's 78 ridings.