Justin Trudeau — it’s long past time to go

If the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting a different result, it’s time the clinicians walked the Liberal Party and their fatally flawed leader down to a room with rubber walls.

What else are we to make of the psychosis now infecting Justin Trudeau and the Liberal caucus? Chrystia Freeland — the minister of finance, a.k.a. the minister of everything, who could look at any mess Trudeau created and nod approvingly — has now left. And left in spectacular fashion, burning her partner in economic crimes against Canada to the ground in her resignation letter (dropped on the day she was meant to update the country on its finances).


Ontario Liberal MPs want Justin Trudeau to step down: sources

You’d think he’d take the hint. The longer he stays the greater the damage to the LPC and for Canada.

He seems to be going scorched earth.

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GOLDSTEIN: What, other than ego, makes Trudeau think he can win?

I hate this asshole.

Since we’re told that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is contemplating his political future, a fair question to ask is what – other than his own ego – makes him think he can win the next federal election?

Or, alternatively, if Trudeau has ruled out that possibility, what makes him think he’s best equipped to lead the Liberals so that they aren’t relegated to third or fourth place in party standings in the next election?

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From Liberal Icon to MAGA Joke: The Waning Fortunes of Justin Trudeau

Justin Trudeau’s career is the stuff of 21st-century political drama, with an arc that has taken him from glamorous liberal standard-bearer to the butt of jokes by President-elect Donald J. Trump and his acolytes.

He burst onto the international scene in 2015, a newly elected young leader of Canada.

And he spent the next decade building a brand around being a feminist, an environmentalist, a refugee and Indigenous rights advocate, pursuing the same message of change and hope as Barack Obama.

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‘A dumpster fire, wrapped up in a cluster …’: Inside the chaos of Justin Trudeau’s Ottawa

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s week started with a crisis his opponents likened to a “gong show at the bottom of a dumpster fire, wrapped up in a cluster.”

Canada’s three-term prime minister managed to make it to Friday when he announced a Cabinet shakeup triggered in part by the bombshell exit of Chrystia Freeland, who quit Monday as head of finance and deputy prime minister.

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It seems everyone but Justin Trudeau knows it’s time for him to go. Why is it so hard to quit?

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau appears to be teetering on the brink.

He’s dealt with scandal before. A family trip to a private Bahamas island yielded a damning 2017 ethics report. The SNC-Lavalin affair threatened his government. Photos of Trudeau wearing brownface and a turban rocked his 2019 election campaign.

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Can Trudeau prorogue? Rideau Hall is back at the centre of politics

Mary Simon’s job just got a lot more interesting.

The normally ceremonial office of governor-general could face its most challenging decision since the parliamentary crisis of late 2008, when then-governor-general Michaëlle Jean allowed then-prime minister Stephen Harper to prorogue Parliament, avoiding an imminent House of Commons defeat.

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What’s Ahead for Trudeau as He Faces Internal and External Pressure

Pressure is mounting from all sides for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who faces a divided caucus, the NDP joining other opposition parties to vote no confidence, and the incoming president of the world’s superpower promising economy-crushing tariffs while dubbing him the “governor” of a 51st U.S. state.

Where can the prime minister take it from here?

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Was Chrystia Freeland pushed, or did she seize an opportunity?

My head is still spinning at how deftly Chrystia Freeland has played her hand, nimbly exiting the Titanic just before iceberg impact and then quickly resurfacing as the saviour of the nation, with (incidentally) a suddenly improved shot at becoming prime minister.

Let me be clear: I’d be pleased with any development that would spare us the nightmare of a Pierre Poilievre victory.

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The countdown has officially begun’: Ontario MPs meet, they agree it’s time for Trudeau to go

The majority of Ontario’s Liberal MPs have come to the consensus that the prime minister needs to go.

Saturday morning, 51 of the province’s 75 Liberal MPs met virtually on a zoom call to discuss the past week’s developments — from Chrystia Freeland’s bombshell resignation as finance minister to the growing calls for Justin Trudeau to resign.

During the hour-long meeting, no member of Parliament — including cabinet ministers — pleaded the case on camera for the prime minister to fight the next election as Liberal leader, according to seven sources on the call, who spoke to the Star on condition of anonymity.

How soon is he gone? That is the Question.

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Tom Mulcair: Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s train wreck of a final act

On Feb. 29, 1984, Pierre Trudeau famously took a walk in the snow that, he explained the next day, inspired him to announce that he was leaving politics for good.

Last February, on the 40th anniversary of that poetic moment, there was some speculation that Justin Trudeau might take his own walk in the snow and announce he was stepping down.

He was way down in the polls and Canadians had clearly started to signal a desire for change. But drama teacher Trudeau was not going to exit stage right without chewing the scenery one last time.

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SLOBODIAN: Hard to believe, but a majority of Canadians voted for Trudeau

A few Canadian prime ministers were intensely disliked, even loathed by the time they left office.

That would include Sir John A. Macdonald and Pierre Trudeau. And, for a time, Stephen Harper — although those ‘MISS ME YET’ memes sure started to pop up fast when Canadians realized the good old days were rapidly slipping away.

Trudeau Jr. had come along to say: “Hold my Shirley Temple.” (Or do immature dancing Swifties drink beer? Maybe Bud Light.)

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Two million people are expected to leave the country in Canada’s immigration reset. What if they don’t?

Despite moving to Canada from India in 2018 as an international student and receiving a work permit upon graduating two years later, Dinesh* lives in Ontario today as a visitor even though that was obviously not the original plan.

But with no other way to extend his stay in Canada after the expiry of his work permit in July, the 25-year-old decided to “convert” his status by applying for a visitor visa.


If you have to call in the Army do it to rid this country of Trudeau’s replacement migrants.

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Rick Bell: ‘Let’s pull the plug and solve this,’ Danielle Smith says, calling for immediate federal election

When Premier Danielle Smith looks at Ottawa this time, as the federal Liberals desperately try to regroup, she sees “somebody who is trying to shuffle their way out of chaos.”

That somebody is the embattled and wildly unpopular Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

“You can’t do that. The only way you can solve this kind of chaos is to get a mandate. It is to have an election.”

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We asked 152 Liberal MPs whether Justin Trudeau should resign. Here’s what we heard back … typically evasive BS

We asked 152 Liberal MPs whether Justin Trudeau should resign. Here’s what we heard back

Will Justin Trudeau resign?

It’s the question on many minds after Chrystia Freeland, Trudeau’s right-hand minister, delivered a stunning blow to the unpopular Liberal government with a surprise resignation this week that shocked markets, drew the attention of U.S. president-elect Donald Trump, and turned debate over the prime minister’s future into the biggest story in the country.

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