Canada PM Trudeau is likely to announce resignation, source says
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is increasingly likely to announce he intends to step down, though he has not made a final decision, a source familiar with Trudeau's thinking said on Sunday.
The
source spoke to Reuters after the Globe and Mail reported that Trudeau
was expected to announce as early as Monday that he would quit as leader
of Canada's ruling Liberal Party after nine years in office.
The source requested anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly.
Trudeau's departure would leave the party without a permanent head at a time when polls show the Liberals will badly lose to the official opposition Conservatives in an election that must be held by late October.
Sources
told the Globe and Mail that they did not know definitely when Trudeau
would announce his plans to leave but said they expect it would happen
before a emergency meeting of Liberal legislators on Wednesday.
An increasing number of Liberal parliamentarians, alarmed by a series of gloomy polls, have publicly urged Trudeau to quit.The
prime minister's office did not immediately respond to a request for
comment outside regular business hours. The prime minister's regularly
published schedule for Monday said he would participate virtually in a
cabinet committee meeting on Canada-U.S. relations.
It
remains unclear whether Trudeau will leave immediately or stay on as
prime minister until a new Liberal leader is selected, the Globe and
Mail report added.
Trudeau
took over as Liberal leader in 2013 when the party was in deep trouble
and had been reduced to third place in the House of Commons for the
first time. If
he does resign, it would likely spur fresh calls for a quick election
to put in place a stable government able to deal with the administration
of President-elect Donald Trump for the next four years.
Trudeau,
53, had been able to fend off Liberal legislators worried about the
polls and the loss of safe seats in two special elections. But
calls for him to step aside have grown since December, when Trudeau
tried to demote Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland, one of his closest
cabinet allies, after she pushed back against his proposals for more
spending. Freeland quit instead and penned a letter accusing Trudeau of "political gimmicks" rather than focusing on what was best for the country.
Trudeau
propelled the Liberals to power in 2015 promising "sunny ways" and a
progressive agenda that promoted the rights of women and a promise to
fight climate change. But
the everyday realities of governing gradually wore him down and like
many Western leaders, the need to deal with the effects of the pandemic
ate up much of his time.
Although
Ottawa spent heavily to protect consumers and businesses, racking up
record budget deficits, this provided little protection from public
anger as prices soared. A botched immigration policy led to hundreds of thousands of arrivals, straining an already overheated housing market.
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