Trudeau resigns as Canada Prime Minister: To step down after new Liberal party leader named
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced on Monday that he will step down as leader of the ruling Liberals after nine years in office but will stay on in his post until the party chooses a replacement.
Trudeau,
under heavy pressure from Liberal legislators to quit amid polls
showing the party will be crushed at the next election, said at a news
conference that parliament would be suspended until March 24.
That
means an election is unlikely to be held before May and Trudeau will
still be prime minister when U.S. President-elect Donald Trump - who has
threatened tariffs that would cripple Canada's economy - takes office
on Jan. 20.
"This
country deserves a real choice in the next election, and it has become
clear to me that if I'm having to fight internal battles, I cannot be
the best option in that election," Trudeau said.
Trudeau, 53, took office in November 2015 and won reelection twice, becoming one of Canada's longest-serving prime ministers. But
his popularity started dipping two years ago amid public anger over
high prices and a housing shortage, and his fortunes never recovered.
Polls show the Liberals will badly lose to the official opposition Conservatives in an election that must be held by late October, regardless of who the leader is.
Parliament
was due to resume on Jan. 27 and opposition parties had vowed to bring
down the government as soon as they could, most likely at the end of
March. But if parliament does not return until March 24, the earliest
they could present a non-confidence motion would be some time in May.
Trudeau
said he had asked Canada's Governor General, the representative of King
Charles in the country, to prorogue parliament and she had granted that
request.
Trudeau
had until recently been able to fend off Liberal legislators worried
about the poor showing in polls and the loss of safe seats in two
special elections last year.
But
calls for him to step aside have soared since last month, when he 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.
"Removing
me from the equation as the leader who will fight the next election for
the Liberal Party should also decrease the level of polarization that
we're seeing right now in the House and in Canadian politics," Trudeau
said.
The
Conservatives are led by Pierre Poilievre, a career politician who rose
to prominence in early 2022 when he supported truck drivers who took
over the center of Ottawa as part of a protest against COVID-19 vaccine
mandates.
No comments
Thanks for viewing, your comments are appreciated.
Disclaimer: Comments on this blog are NOT posted by Olomoinfo, Readers are SOLELY responsible for their comments.
Need to contact us for gossips, news reports, adverts or anything?
Email us on; olomoinfo@gmail.com