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Term of office Other portfolios Party Prime minister Party (Ministry) Term start Term end 1: Allan MacEachen MP for Cape Breton Highlands—Canso (1921–2017) September 16, 1977 June 4, 1979 President of the Privy Council; Liberal: Pierre Trudeau Liberal : Position did not exist June 4, 1979 – March 3, 1980: Joe Clark Progressive ...
Canadian Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Monday said he would step down in the coming months after nine years in power, bowing to legislators alarmed by the party's miserable pre-election ...
In the aftermath of the event, Trudeau's government also saw a further dip in public support: polling aggregator 338Canada's December 22, 2024 projection put the Liberals narrowly in 3rd place by seat count for the first time during his tenure as prime minister, with the Bloc Québécois on track to form the Official Opposition, according to ...
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau stepping down as party leader after nearly 10 years in office ... were able to form a government. Trudeau had hoped the positivity around his government’s ...
Trudeau's options include staying on until a near-certain defeat in a no-confidence motion, probably in March, stepping down next month to allow the party to name an interim leader, or ending the ...
Freeland and Trudeau in 2018. Chrystia Freeland was appointed Canada's deputy prime minister in 2019, following the re-election of Trudeau's government, and was the country's first female finance minister in 2020, and was often nicknamed the "minister of everything", and widely seen as a potential successor to Trudeau for the leadership of the Liberal Party.
OTTAWA (Reuters) -Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is increasingly likely to announce he intends to step down, though he has not made a final decision, a source familiar with Trudeau's ...
On 12 January 2021, Trudeau carried out a shuffle of his ministry. [21] [22] It came shortly after Innovation minister Navdeep Bains announced he intended to stand down from the government and not seek re-election at the 2021 Canadian federal election. [23] The shuffle spurred speculation of a snap election. [21] [22]