A Canadian prime minister who has outstayed his welcome, persistent inflation, a government bumped and bruised by scandal and a fired-up opposition leader itching for a public showdown.

It was against this backdrop, four decades ago, that Pierre Trudeau took his apocryphal “walk in the snow” and decided not to contest the next federal election.

After a shocking upset in a “safe” electoral district and with a looming possibility of a blowout in the next federal election, Justin Trudeau’s predicament closely mirrors that of his father.

But the incumbent prime minister says he has no intention of stepping down, despite mounting evidence the public is growing increasingly weary of both his tenure – and of his Liberal party.

In late June, Trudeau’s party lost a by-election for a seat the party had held for nearly three decades, foreshadowing what pundits say could portend the collapse of the party’s stronghold in Canada’s most populous city.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    4 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A Canadian prime minister who has outstayed his welcome, persistent inflation, a government bumped and bruised by scandal and a fired-up opposition leader itching for a public showdown.

    Earlier this week, it was reported that Trudeau will not attend the Calgary Stampede which starts on Friday – the first time he will miss the festive, politically-charged 10-day celebration in the Conservative heartland since he became leader in 2013.

    As in the US, where Democrats are fretting that Joe Biden’s stumbling debate performance and concern over his age, Liberals are worried the once-popular Trudeau could be a liability for heading into the next federal election.

    Lori Turnbull, director of Dalhousie University’s school of public administration, says part of Trudeau’s challenges lie in the reality that all parties – and leaders – eventually lose their shine.

    And the prime minister, who has led his Liberal party for more than a decade, has repeatedly said he wants to contest his fourth federal election – a national vote that is expected to be rife with mudslinging and personal attacks.

    While the he told reporters Wednesday he was personally calling MPs, tensions are clearly mounting within the Liberals, and a growing number fear the unpopular leader could cost them their own seats in parliament.


    The original article contains 897 words, the summary contains 209 words. Saved 77%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • systemglitch@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    He’s about eight years overdue. This is the crime Canadians committed upon themselves by electing someone b cause of their name instead of their merits. He was groomed for the roll, and he was never ready for it.

      • systemglitch@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        I could, but this place is a little too hostile for my taste with dissenting opinions on our embarrassment of a PM. The only PM we’ve had, I’ve ever been embarrassed about, and I’ve seen a few both Liberal and Conservative with whom I’ve never taken issue with.

        Overall we were doing pretty good until now. Rip.

          • shinratdr@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            “I have so many reasons it would take me days to go through my file of very good reasons and I have better things to do like comment on Lemmy about Trudeau and all the reasons I have to not like him.”

            I don’t like Trudeau for the same reasons I did before he was elected. He’s a Liberal, and he’s more right wing than I want in a leader. Supporting the oil industry at the expense of our national standing and the environment, and reneging on his promise to end FPTP are also good reasons.

            But I am immediately suspicious of anyone who HATES him or is SO EMBARRASSED by him because they have clearly fallen for a right-wing disinformation campaign against him. They hate him because they’re told about how awful he is because carbon tax and gays and economy.

            • girlfreddy@lemmy.caOP
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              4 months ago

              Exactly. I had high hopes for him when he was first elected, but when he walked back ending FPTP I knew the slide would continue. At this point it feels like America and Canada are in the same boat … vote for an incumbent we don’t really want or risk having a MAGAt (wannabe in our case) at the helm.

              I hate it here.

              • shinratdr@lemmy.ca
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                4 months ago

                It’s different having a viable 3rd/4th/5th party, so it’s nice to at least have another way to vote that doesn’t immediately just end up in the trash.

                After reneging on his FPTP promise, I’m never voting Liberal again. It’s NDP all the way from now on unless something major changes. My hope is for a conservative minority and the possibility of a coalition or strong opposition, but I’m not holding my breath.

  • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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    4 months ago

    I’m Indigenous and I live in northern Ontario … and I fully support our current government for what it is and most of the people I talk to around me feel the same.

    It’s only a very loud minority of self serving conservatives with a huge bone to pick and an oversized chip on their shoulder that talk non-stop about how terrible this government is. I see stickers on trucks, ads on the internet, ads on tv, ads in paper, constant bombardment from everywhere in public ads saying how bad the government is … while most of the people I talk to have no real ill feelings against the government and only a handful of hateful, spiteful, angry conservatives who go around saying how terrible our country is and blaming it on one single person for no real reason.

    Honestly, the only message I hear from conservatives is that they hate Justin Trudeau … some knowledgeable ones and those with a decent vocabulary can describe to me why they hate Trudeau … the rest just keep telling me we are living in a communist dictatorship and they demand their freedom back.

    I agree that this isn’t a perfect government … they could be doing so much more but as they are now, they are doing fine.

    It’s the conservatives I fear the most because if they achieve power, we will regress this country back to fighting between minorities/marginalized people/people of colour/indigenous and a vocal moral minority of conservatives that think they own the country.

    This isn’t a political campaign for any kind of ideology … its just another hate campaign designed to make one group fight another because of??? just because they want to be hateful and fight … then after the fight is over, they’ll continue fighting with everyone and blaming problems on those they deem less than themselves.

    • girlfreddy@lemmy.caOP
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      4 months ago

      Canada always goes through cycles like this. Imo the bigger issue is we act like we only have two parties to choose from in federal elections. At no time in our history have the NDP ever been considered a viable alternative federally … and that drives me bonkers.

      • Beaver@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        You can thank first-past-the-post for screwing over smaller parties and independents.

        • girlfreddy@lemmy.caOP
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          4 months ago

          I can also thank the Cons for screaming bloody murder every time the NDP comes up, ie: “You can’t elect the NDP! Remember Bob Rae!!!”

          • nyan@lemmy.cafe
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            4 months ago

            One honestly wonders what percentage of voters do, in fact, remember what Bob Rae was like in office. I don’t think most people are all that politically aware before somewhere in their mid-teens, which means that probably almost no one born after 1980 remembers politics during the Rae years. The number’s just going to drop from here on, so I don’t think “Remember Bob Rae!” is going to remain a useful rallying cry for the Conservatives for much longer, if it is even now.

            Of course, they’ll just come up with a new one.

          • morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            Bit of a rant because it’s been on my mind.

            Also thank them for killing the per vote subsidy, proroguing parliament to effectively kill a coalition gov, trying to convince Canadians that coalitions are somehow antidemocratic and a seizure of power, muzzling of scientists, barbaric cultural practices hotline, robocall scandal, mandatory minimums, missing more but there was a lot to cover in those years.

            I don’t know how anyone looks back at the harper years and thinks oh it wasn’t that bad, we should totally elect one of his cabinet ministers, no it totally was a taste of things to come, dude’s the chair of the idu which totally pushes this shit on a global scale.

            Harper SHOULD be the Tories’ Bob Rae in terms of making them toxic to the general population, literally the reason so many people voted strategically. Maybe it’s a bunch of us not remembering, a lot of what I mentioned was some time ago, maybe it’s that a lot of Canadians anecdotally seem more interested in what’s happening stateside than their own backyard and are generally don’t pay attention to politics but it seriously concerns me.

          • IninewCrow@lemmy.ca
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            4 months ago

            Always love that argument …

            • red party does all sorts of things for bad government, keeps getting elected
            • blue party does all sorts of things for bad government, keeps getting elected
            • NDP does one thing nobody liked in the 90s … we can’t elect them ever again!!!
      • Arghblarg@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        Reason #1 (or #2) why I will not vote for him. Never forget, once he was in power he suddenly decided FPTP was just dandy.

        (#2 is his other broken promise, to re-examine CSIS/CSE surveillance overreaches…)

      • Beaver@lemmy.ca
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        4 months ago

        He needs to pressured into being reminded about his promise and work with the smaller parties and independents to get it done as 40 liberals voted in favour of advancing a national citizens’ assembly on electoral reform.