Canada set to preside over G7 in 2025 amid political instability at home and abroad

Canada is set to take over the presidency of the G7 in 2025, leading a forum of seven of the world’s most advanced economies at a time of political instability at home and around the world.

Here’s a look at what hosting the G7 means, and what’s at stake.


I hope the Pallies make a good show of themselves as a sort of belated send-off for the departed Trudeau.

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Justin Trudeau’s detractors are growing more courageous

The holidays are often a time of reflection. And even as everyone is still shaking off their cheese-induced torpor, the internal calls for Justin Trudeau to resign as Liberal Leader are accumulating.

It emerged this week that a majority of the Liberal Quebec caucus wants Mr. Trudeau to step down, though no one involved seems willing to sign their name to their convictions. This follows a meeting of the Ontario caucus just before Christmas, at which more than 50 MPs agreed that the Prime Minister needed to resign, though they, too, wanted to remain anonymous.

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The federal Liberal party faces only high risk choices in 2025

The New Year promises to be a painful one for Canadian Liberals. As Isaiah Berlin, the renowned political analyst put it, sometimes in politics there are only two choices — the unpleasant and the unacceptable. Arguably, this is the most unpleasant nightmare the Liberal party has faced in a century.

Yes, Paul Martin’s hapless government bequeathed two incompetent leaders and third place in the political basement. Yes, Pierre Trudeau rescued the party from a likely electoral debacle only by a last minute agreement to come out of retirement.

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Liberals could buy time as government to pick new leader if Trudeau steps aside

Amid recurring calls from elected MPs and the Canadian electorate for the prime minister to step aside, Justin Trudeau is not telegraphing any future moves.

“We will see what he does,” Lori Turnbull, a professor in the faculty of management at Dalhousie University in Halifax, said of Trudeau, the man who has been prime minister since 2015.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if he prorogues around the time of the U.S. inauguration (Jan. 20) and uses the instability of the Trump presidency as a reason why, look, we all have to hunker down and we all have to be Team Canada and we don’t have time for that BS that we have to find a new leader,” Turnbull said.

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Trudeau asked about his father’s famous walk in the snow, ‘Swifty bracelet’ and Poilievre

Comedian Mark Critch landed a year-end interview with Justin Trudeau, touching on the prime minister’s political struggles, divorce and Donald Trump.

This is better than the stale Critch interview gimmick.

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Amy Hamm: As the Trudeau government crumbles, Canadians can expect a better year to come

The year 2025 will be a good one for Canadians.  

Our dysfunctional Liberal government signed off for their Christmas vacation with their house in shambles: a disappearing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who may or may not resign when he returns to Parliament in the new year; a defiant former deputy prime minister and finance minister, Chrystia Freeland, whose resignation delivered a near-fatal blow to Trudeau’s leadership; a liberal caucus on the verge of revolt; and Trudeau’s self-serving New Democratic lapdog, Jagmeet Singh, finally within finger’s reach of the coveted pension that has held Canada hostage to his avarice for far too long.

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Michael Higgins: Is Carney vying to guide the Liberals through the wilderness?

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau may have cancelled his end-of-year interviews as he reflects on his future, but thankfully Canadians have had Mark Carney to lecture them on Liberal values.

In an op-ed for the Globe and Mail, Carney, the former governor of the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England, sounded like a man who is running for the Liberal leadership.

Justin’s handpicked man.

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Proroguing Parliament to avoid a confidence vote was an iffy idea in 2008. It’s a terrible one in 2025.

“Stephen Harper has used prorogation to avoid difficult political circumstances,” the Liberals’ 2015 platform complained. “We will not.”

Well, that was then. Mr. Harper, it is true, had used the power to prorogue Parliament in the way the Liberals described: to escape certain defeat on a confidence vote, in December, 2008, and to cut short a parliamentary committee’s inquiries into the Afghan prisoners affair, in 2010.

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95 Percent of Canadians Agree Country Is in Housing Crisis

Virtually all Canadians say they believe the country is in the midst of a housing crisis, with 69 percent strongly agreeing with the statement and 26 percent saying they somewhat agree.

In the new IPSOS poll, which surveyed 1,001 Canadians, just 4 percent disagreed that too many people cannot afford home ownership in Canada.
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Freeland shows the pen is still mightier than the sword

It has been a tough year for journalism. The mighty White House press corps was caught covering up the age-addled state of U.S. President Joe Biden. The conspiracy necessarily involved the vice-president and first lady, but neither of them were expected to tell the truth. Journalists are supposed to do that.

Some don’t try. There were those who bestrode the world of new journalism like veritable colossi, but it was not clear that they were aiming at journalism. Pandering to Vladimir Putin and castigating Winston Churchill is something, and a rather popular something at that, but is it journalism?


Yet another steaming pile of “What a heroine Freeland is.”

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Majority of Justin Trudeau’s caucus calls on him to quit

OTTAWA — With a majority of his caucus now calling on him to resign, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is on a ski holiday, reflecting on whether to stay or go.

Trudeau is way down in the polls and facing challenges from within his party about whether he’s the right leader to unite Canadians. His decision comes as Canada braces for a tariff war when Donald Trump returns to the White House in three weeks.

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Chinese Canadian group highlights fresh concerns about Hong Kong government influence

A group of Chinese Canadians that made submissions to the federal government’s inquiry into foreign interference is raising fresh concerns about the Hong Kong government’s influence in Canada.

It is drawing attention to two new developments in the last week. The first is the Hong Kong government’s targeting of six activists, including a Canadian who lives in Metro Vancouver, and its offer of a large cash reward for information that could lead to their arrests for having allegedly violated Hong Kong’s national security law.

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