Canada's Trudeau reshuffles his Cabinet as resignation calls mount and
new election threat looms
Send a link to a friend
[December 21, 2024]
By ROB GILLIES
TORONTO (AP) — Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's chances of
staying on in power have become more tenuous after the opposition party
that backed his government for years announced it will vote no
confidence in the government when Parliament resumes.
An embattled Trudeau reshuffled his Cabinet on Friday — but whether he
will step aside in the coming days or weeks remains an open question.
Trudeau did not address his future or take questions after he left the
meeting with his new Cabinet. But Trudeau said his government is
preparing for Donald Trump and his threat to impose 25% tariffs on all
Canadian products.
“In exactly one month the new president will inaugurated and we are
preparing Canada to face that,” Trudeau said in his first remarks to
reporters since his finance minister quit.
“Whatever the U.S. administration may do, that is our priority, and that
is that we’re working on and we have a lot of work to do.”
But Trudeau is facing rising discontent over his leadership, and the
abrupt departure of his finance minister on Monday could be something he
can’t recover from.
“The prime minister has simply asked for some time to reflect on his own
future,” said David McGuinty, the new Public Safety Minister.
Rachel Bendayan, the official languages minister, said Trudeau “told us
he had a difficult choice to make."
The political upheaval comes at a difficult moment for Canada.
Trump keeps calling Trudeau the governor of the 51st state and has
threatened to impose sweeping tariffs if Canada does not stem what he
calls a flow of migrants and drugs in the United States — even though
far fewer of each cross into the U.S. from Canada than from Mexico,
which Trump has also threatened.
“We have in the next 60 days an existential threat for the Canadian
economy, for people that could lose their jobs. The unemployment rate
could double. We need to focus on that,” said Marc Miller, the
immigration minister and a close friend of Trudeau's.
“I think he’s the best to lead us in a very difficult situation. We
can’t be in a position where the government has no ability to fight
back."
Parliament is now shut for the holidays until late next month, but the
leftist New Democratic Party said Friday it would trigger a vote of no
confidence in Trudeau after lawmakers reconvene on Jan. 27.
[to top of second column]
|
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on during a cabinet swearing-in
ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, on Friday, Dec.20, 2024.(Sean
Kilpatrick /The Canadian Press via AP)
Because Trudeau’s Liberals do not hold an outright majority in
Parliament, they have for years depended on the support of the NDP to
pass legislation and stay in power. But that support has vanished — NDP
leader Jagmeet Singh has called on Trudeau to resign — and he made clear
Friday the NDP will vote to bring down the government.
“No matter who is leading the Liberal Party, this government’s time is
up. We will put forward a clear motion of non-confidence in the next
sitting of the House of Commons,” Singh said in letter released just
before the Cabinet shuffle.
The Liberals could delay Parliament’s return. Trudeau could decide not
to run in the next year’s election and allow for a party leadership
race.
Liberal Rob Oliphant became the latest lawmaker to call for the prime
minister to step aside, saying there should be a “robust, open
leadership contest.”
Trudeau, who has led the country for nearly a decade, has become widely
unpopular in recent years over a wide range of issues, including the
high cost of living and rising inflation.
There is no mechanism for Trudeau’s party to force him out in the short
term. He could say he will step aside when a new party leader is chosen,
or his Liberal party could be forced from power by a “no confidence”
vote in Parliament that would trigger an election that would very likely
favor the opposing Conservative Party.
Opposition Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre said Canada needs an
immediate election and requires a prime minister who can face Trump from
a position of strength.
“We cannot have a chaotic clown show running our government into the
ground,” he said.
Concerns about Trudeau’s leadership were exacerbated Monday when
Chrystia Freeland, Trudeau’s finance minister and deputy prime minister,
resigned from the Cabinet. Freeland was highly critical of Trudeau’s
handling of the economy in the face of steep tariffs threatened by
Trump.
Shortly before Freeland announced her decision, the housing minister
also quit.
Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University in
Montreal, said Friday's Cabinet reshuffle was necessary because of
recent departures but said for many Canadians “it might simply appear as
rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic.”
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
|