Canadian voters supported Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberal Party on Monday in a national election that was heavily influenced by President Donald Trump.
The CBC said it was too early to know whether liberals would win enough seats to form a majority government, but it predicted another term of office for the party that has governed Canada for almost a decade.
Just a few months ago, it appeared to be ousted by the opposition Conservatives amid rising inflation, rising immigration, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s approach to Trump, and public dissatisfaction in the presidential election.
Trudeau announced his resignation on January 6, two weeks before Trump was launched as president in the United States after the votes showed hardships with voters.
However, since he took office, Trump has infuriated Canadians towards one of his country’s closest allies. His policies and rhetoric include imposing sudden tariffs on Canadian imports and promoting a volatile plan to make Canada a 51st US nation — a central issue in Canadian elections, with the Liberal Party making a surprising turn, filling the 20-point gap with conservatives in weeks.
The Liberal Party was also boosted by candidate Carney. Carney may be set up on its own to address the global economic uncertainty created by Trump and his tariffs.
Like Trump, Carney never bound an elected position before becoming the leader of his country, and spent most of his life in the private sector. He was elected to Liberal Party leader last month and then became prime minister, and then immediately called for an SNAP election in the hopes of securing a term.
Kearney, 60, is also a former central banker who was used to deal with the global financial crisis of 2008 and the economic crisis that operated the Bank of Canada after the Bank of England during the Brexit process.
He promoted the experience during the campaign and lasted for 37 days.
“Mark will provide us with proven leadership and real plans to bring about change in the party and our country and build the most powerful economy in the G7,” his campaign said, referring to groups of seven developed countries.
Carney’s opponent, conservative leader Pierre Polyable, was on track until the beginning of this year, with his “Trump Light” style embracing the populist wings of his party. But as Canada’s rage grew, his similarities with Trump began to work against him.
Poilliebre has promised employment opportunities and that ZZ voters can afford a home, and that they can capitalize on public fatigue with the liberal government. At a rally on Sunday, the CBC cited him as calling the Trudeau government “a lost liberal decade of crime, chaos, drugs and loss of disability.”
Trump continued Canada on Monday, saying it should once again become the 51st state “celebrated” as voters went to vote.
“All positives without negativity. It was meant!” he said on his true social platform.
Carney and Poilierble rebuked Trump for such comments and other people he made about the Canadian election.
“They can split and become weak,” Carney said in a social media video on Monday, saying the US. “But this is Canada, and we’ll decide what happens here.”
Poiriebre wrote on X on Monday: “President Trump, please stay away from the election.”
“The only Canadians in the ballot box will determine Canada’s future,” he wrote. “Canada has always been proud, sovereign, independent, and we will never become the 51st state.”
One voter said he voted for liberal because Polyavel “sounds like a mini-trump to me.” Toronto’s Reed Warren told the Associated Press that tariffs were also a concern.
“Canadians are wonderful in all the shade thrown out of America, but that definitely creates some confusion, that’s for sure,” Warren said.
Trump appears to have not commented publicly on the election results at the end of Monday, but his predecessor congratulated Carney and the liberals.
“I am confident that Mark will be a strong leader in the fundamental values and interests that Canadians and Americans share,” former President Joe Biden said in a post in X.
