Trudeau says he considered stepping down during marriage difficulties

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a recent podcast that he considered walking away from the job last year as his marriage began to fracture.

Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Grégoire Trudeau, announced last August that they had agreed to separate.

During an episode of the ReThinking podcast that was released Tuesday, psychologist and host Adam Grant asked Trudeau how often he thinks about quitting.

“These days not at all,” Trudeau said, before conceding that the thought crossed his mind last year.

Share

Trudeau had article alleging NDA involving West Point Grey Academy spiked on Facebook

Ottawa asked Facebook to remove false article about Trudeau during 2019 election, inquiry hears

One of Canada’s top civil servants asked that a false article about Prime Minister Justin Trudeau be removed from Facebook during the 2019 election, according to Friday testimony and documents tabled at the public inquiry into foreign inference.

The article in question was published by the Buffalo Chronicle. It contained uncorroborated claims involving Trudeau and was spreading online during the 2019 election campaign.

Of flagrance and fellatios: Trudeau’s dark stint as a school teacher

Share

WARMINGTON: Prime Minister acknowledges most religious holidays – except Good Friday

It was a snub of biblical proportions that did not go unnoticed by Canada’s 19 million Christians.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, after all, would never miss offering good wishes to any other religion at the start of their most sacred holidays.

Too busy whoring himself to Muslims.

Share

Trudeau even more unpopular than Dementia Joe

… Many world leaders are also up for re-election. More than 60 countries — half of the world’s population — will vote or have voted this year. Most of the countries in the chart above will vote in national or European Union elections in the coming months.

Why are people so upset with their leaders? Some explanations are local, but four global issues have driven much of the public’s anger. Call them the four I’s: inflation, immigration, inequality and incumbency.

Share

Colby Cosh: Justin Trudeau’s unlikely reputational recovery

Says his kids punched him out

This week, colleague Ivison presented an argument that Canadian prime ministers often become more popular over time once they’re out of our hair, and that this may prove true even of Justin Trudeau despite his apparently inevitable electoral destruction. No doubt it’s possible. It takes some imagination to make such an argument, and imagination is a singular weakness of mine. 

Share

Canada’s Justin Trudeau says he thinks daily about leaving ‘crazy job’ … but he stays for all of us!

Canada’s prime minister says he frequently thinks about leaving his “crazy job” but plans to stay on through another election.

Justin Trudeau has faced growing questions about his political future, with polls suggesting he is increasingly unpopular among Canadians.

In an interview with broadcaster Radio-Canada, Mr Trudeau also spoke about personal sacrifices of his job.

Canada’s next general election must be held by October 2025.


He’s going to hold on to the bitter end. He is a vain and vengeful little punk.

h/t Everyone who sent this in

Share

Balkan Devlen: Liberals have irresponsibly turned foreign policy into a wedge issue

As the Cold War was heating up in the late 1940s, U.S. Sen. Arthur Vandenberg said, “Politics stops at the water’s edge.” This sentiment is not shared by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, it seems.

In their quest to find, or, sometimes, create out of thin air, wedges to stem their nosedive in the polls, the Liberals increasingly turn to foreign policy issues for electoral salvation. However, such instrumentalization of foreign policy undermines relationships with allies and, by extension, the Canadian national interest.

Share