Trudeau in peril after Trump spat sparks political crisis
Trudeau in peril after Trump spat sparks political crisis
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has been thrown into fresh disarray with the abrupt departure of his finance minister, Chrystia Freeland.
By the complete of a frenetic Monday, a recent finance minister was in place, but Trudeau was facing calls from members of his own Liberal event to quit.
Without directly referring to the information, the prime minister told event donors at an occurrence in Ottawa: “It’s obviously been an eventful day. It has not been an straightforward day.”
In her scathing resignation note – published on the day she was due to deliver an economic statement – Freeland cited disagreements with her long-period friend on how to respond to the threat of tariffs from Donald Trump.
The US president-elect, who will gain to the White House in January, has vowed to impose a levy of 25% on imported Canadian goods unless the shared border is made more secure.
Economists declare the tariffs could have a devastating result on Canada’s economy.
In her note, Freeland accused Trudeau of choosing “costly political gimmicks” over addressing the threat posed by Trump’s “aggressive economic nationalism”.
Trump himself later responded to Freeland, posting that her “behaviour was totally toxic, and not at all conducive to making deals which are excellent for the very unhappy citizens of Canada”.
Freeland said her selection came after Trudeau told her last week that he no longer wanted her to be the government’s top economic adviser.
Her departure blindsided the government, leaving the fate of the scheduled economic update in the air for hours and bringing Trudeau and his shaky minority Liberals to the brink.
In a further blow, the Liberals lost control of the Cloverdale-Langley City seat in British Columbia, after a by-election triumph for rival Conservatives. It was the Liberals’ third by-election loss of the year.
Freeland’s sudden exit as finance minister earlier in the day “just makes Canada look quite confused and doubtful”, Chris Sands, director of the Wilson Center’s Canada Institute, told the BBC.
“Trudeau finds himself a little bit alone, not super close to any of his ministers, with the large, talented ones mostly now having left,” he added.
Mr Sands said Trump’s triumph in November’s US presidential election has caused a split among US allies, including Canada.
“Do you respond to Trump by pushing back and standing firm, or do you respond by trying to discover a way to avoid dispute?” he said.
Trudeau has made overtures to Trump, including flying to Mar-a-Lago, the president-elect’s Florida estate, last month to dine with the president-elect.
But Freeland’s perspective, said Mr Sands, was closer to that of Mexico – also facing a tariff threat – and Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum.
Mexico has positioned itself under the concept that “now is the period to declare no, to push back, to receive a fighting stance”, he said.
Many politicians recall the challenges they faced during Trump’s first term in office, he added.
“He hasn’t been inaugurated yet, but people are already reacting as though he was the president and taking solemn measures.”
Freeland, who also served as deputy prime minister, had been Ottawa’s navigator during the first Trump administration in the successful re-negotiation of the US-Canada-Mexico free trade pact.
It was “a really demanding and overwhelming procedure for Canada”, Mr Sands said.
In addition to the members of the prime minister’s own event who called on him to quit, Canada’s three opposition event leaders said on Monday that Trudeau must leave.
Pierre Poilievre, chief of the opposition Conservative event of Canada, called for a federal election as soon as feasible.
“Everything is spiralling out of control. We simply cannot leave on like this,” he said.
Canada’s next federal election must be held in October, at the latest.
Laura Stephenson, chair of the political science department at Western University, told the BBC that it was not obvious that a transformation in leadership would affect the current US-Canada dynamic.
“I have no confidence that Trump will react any differently to Poilievre than he does to Trudeau,” she said.
After nine years in power, Trudeau has faced growing calls to resign over concerns he is a drag on his event’s fortunes.
The Liberal chief’s approval rate has plummeted from 63% when he was first elected to 28% in June of this year, according to one poll tracker.
view polls also recommend the Liberals could face a devastating deficit to the Conservatives if an election was held today.
Some Liberal members of parliament have been pressuring Trudeau for months to step down – eight MPs publicly expressed this sentiment on Monday, Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail reported.
In a conference with his caucus following Freeland’s resignation on Monday, Trudeau reportedly heard some of those calls for him to quit directly. Others also expressed their concerns and reservations about his leadership.
Trudeau addressed them by saying he is not immediately stepping down, but that he will reflect on the day’s events, according to sources who spoke to Canadian media about the conference.
Trudeau did not receive questions on his way to the fundraiser in Ottawa, but he told the throng he was “damn proud” of his government’s accomplishments.
In brief remarks, he said working for Canadian values was “at the core of what makes us Liberals”.
“That’s why we display up here, even on the toughest days as a event.”
Trudeau has defied previous calls to step aside and has said repeatedly that he plans to run in the next federal election.
Also on Monday, the leaders of Canada’s provinces and territories met in Toronto to address Trump’s tariff threat.
“It’s chaos correct now up in Ottawa”, said Ontario Premier Doug Ford.
Ford said the premiers will “make sure that we inform the globe there is stability here, there is certainty here in Canada”.
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