Close Menu
Straightnews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Akpabio Sues Natasha for N200bn in Defamation Case over S3xual Harassment Claims

    December 6, 2025 --- 10:31 pm

    Argentina, Spain Handed Kind Draws For 2026 World Cup (Full List)

    December 5, 2025 --- 10:20 pm

    Supreme Court Declares FG’s Seizure of LG Funds Unconstitutional

    December 5, 2025 --- 9:35 pm
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Akpabio Sues Natasha for N200bn in Defamation Case over S3xual Harassment Claims
    • Argentina, Spain Handed Kind Draws For 2026 World Cup (Full List)
    • Supreme Court Declares FG’s Seizure of LG Funds Unconstitutional
    • Nigeria Tax Reforms not Y2K Crisis- Says AKIRS Boss
    • Senate Receives Ambassadorial Nominees as Enang, Ibas, Dambazau, 62 Others Make the List
    • Akwa Ibom Lawmakers Abandon Colleague Over Dog Meat Ban Motion
    • Journalists Must Demand Greater Accountability from Political Leaders- Publisher
    • Be Beacons of Public Interest- Ekoriko tells Nigerian journalists
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Straightnews
    • Home
    • About Us
      • About StraightNews
      • Our Philosophy
      • Editorial Board
    • News
      • Nationwide News
      • Community News
      • Regional News
        • North Central
        • North East
        • North West
        • South East
        • South South
        • South West
    • Nigeria
      • Politics
      • Economy
      • Education
      • Security
      • Energy
      • Agriculture
      • Health
      • Labour
      • Environment
      • Technology
      • Real Estate
      • Transportation
      • Judiciary
      • Electricity
    • Foreign
      • Africa
        • West Africa
        • South Africa
        • North Africa
        • East Africa
      • America
      • Asia
      • Europe
    • Social
      • Photo Gallery
      • Entertainment
      • Events
      • Fashion
      • Fitness
      • Short Stories
      • Lifestyle
      • Relationship
      • Travel
      • Specials
        • Personality Interview
        • Special Reports
        • Profile
    • Articles
      • Editorial
      • Opinion
      • Essay
    • Sports
    • Contact Us
    Straightnews
    Home»Nigeria»Politics»Prime Minister Trudeau on track to retain power
    Politics

    Prime Minister Trudeau on track to retain power

    straightnewsng.comBy straightnewsng.comSeptember 21, 2021 --- 5:36 pmNo Comments6 Mins Read
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau straightnews
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau
    Share
    WhatsApp Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is on track to retain power after winning a third term in Canada’s snap election, though falling short to regain the majority.

    This has forced him to rely on smaller parties in another fragmented parliament to hold onto power.

    Trudeau’s Liberal Party was elected or leading in 158 of the 338 seats in the House of Commons, with 99 per cent of the polls reporting. That’s one more seat than he won in the last vote in 2019.

    The main opposition Conservatives, under Erin O’Toole, won 119 seats, two fewer than last time.

    For a second straight election, though, the Liberals lost the popular vote to the Conservatives and won only because of a strong showing in Toronto, Montreal and other cities.

    Overall, the result leaves parliament little changed from what it was before Trudeau called the vote — a stable minority that gives the prime minister license to continue pursuing a pre-election big-spending agenda that had already received parliamentary backing earlier this year. In addition, Trudeau should easily find support in the legislature to press ahead with new campaign pledges such as raising taxes on financial institutions and imposing stricter emission rules for the oil and gas sector.

    “This points to ongoing heavy fiscal support and some upside bias towards wider deficits in the medium term,” Doug Porter, chief economist at Bank of Montreal, said by email. “Of course, since it seems we will be dealing with a minority government, the specifics will remain fluid.”

    Other initiatives expected to be brought forward quickly include new regulations that will compel media stream services and social platforms like Netflix Inc. and TikTok Inc. to finance and promote Canadian content. Trudeau had introduced a bill to regulate the sector in the previous parliament that never won passage through the Senate before the election was called.

    In his victory speech early Tuesday morning in Montreal, Trudeau likened the election result to voters sending parliamentarians “back to work.”

    “I hear you when you say you just want to get back to the things you love, and not worry about this pandemic or about an election,” he said.

    The Liberal victory is a historic milestone for Trudeau, marking only the eighth time a Canadian leader has won three successive elections. Trudeau’s father, Pierre, also did it. It also represents a comeback of sorts for Trudeau, whose party was trailing in the polls midway through the five-week campaign.

    But the outcome is also a rebuke of Trudeau’s decision to call a snap election that many Canadians saw as a power grab while the Covid-19 pandemic still rages. With more than 90% of polls reporting, the Liberals had just 32.2% of the national vote. That would be the lowest share for any governing party in the nation’s history. The Conservatives stood at 34%.

    It’s the second time voters have denied this prime minister full control of the legislature, limiting his freedom to take big risks or govern unilaterally.

    The results reflect a nation that’s unsure about its immediate future amid a fourth wave of the pandemic. Canadians are dealing with growing debt levels and concerned about a future transition from an oil-producing nation to a low-carbon economy. Party leaders struggled to find a coherent message with which to unite the electorate, pollsters said.

    “That’s a damning assessment of the front-runners from Canadians, reflecting for them, a lack of inspiring choices,” said Shachi Kurl, executive director of the Angus Reid Institute, a Vancouver-based polling firm.

    Like in 2019, when Trudeau lost his majority, the outcome also underscores the regional divisions facing the nation. Resource-rich western Canadians again voted heavily for Conservatives, a party more supportive of the energy sector. Quebeckers chose to send nationalists to the legislature in large numbers, instead of siding with Trudeau’s federalist party.

    To be sure, Trudeau will have a stable minority. He has multiple potential partners to pass legislation, giving the prime minister maximum leverage. The New Democratic Party won 25 seats, while the Bloc Quebecois had 34. Each has enough to push the Liberals beyond the 170 votes in parliament needed to pass legislation.

    Minority governments have become familiar to Canadians. The past seven elections have now produced five minority governments. They’re popular because they require the participation of several parties to make laws.

    But there’s a downside. Minority parliaments keep parties on constant campaign footing and give them less scope to consider long-term issues. In practice, that means politicians are wary of tackling big problems like Canada’s sagging competitiveness or slow transition toward a low-carbon economy.

    “The economic challenges ahead of us are significant,” Robert Asselin, senior vice president of policy at the Business Council of Canada, said by email. “We are going to need a longer-term approach to growth.”

    Since the 2019 election, the country’s benchmark S&P/TSX Composite Index has climbed 23%, barely half the gain of the S&P 500. The Canadian currency has been the second-worst performer among G-10 currencies against the U.S. dollar. Canada’s dollar gained on the election results, advancing 0.4% to C$1.2768 per U.S. dollar at 7:16 a.m. in Toronto.

    Trudeau largely had control over the economic agenda last month before he called the election, with all three opposition parties at one point backing his emergency borrowing to pay for the Covid-19 response.

    The Liberals passed a budget in April with C$140 billion ($110 billion) in new spending measures, with support from the NDP. Even the Conservatives largely supported the Liberal government’s pandemic support measures through much of last year.

    But the prospect of the Liberals linking up with the New Democrats on policy could prompt an even more leftward shift. The NDP wants to raise tax rates on corporate income and capital gains, as well as on wealthy individuals.

    The election outcome also amounted to a rejection of O’Toole, the Conservative leader whose gamble to move his party closer to the political center with a moderate platform failed to win enough voters to offset losses to his right. In particular, the Conservatives struggled to make any breakthroughs in the big urban centers.

    “There are no winners here,” Darrell Bricker, global chief executive of Ipsos Public Affairs, said by email. (Yahoo)

    Bloc Quebecois Darrell Bricker-global chief executive of Ipsos Public Affairs Doug Porter-chief economist at Bank of Montreal Erin O’Toole executive director of the Angus Reid Institute House of Commons Montreal Netflix Inc. New Democratic Party Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Robert Asselin-senior vice president of policy at the Business Council of Canada Shachi Kurl TikTok Inc Toronto Trudeau’s Liberal Party western Canadians
    Share. WhatsApp Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    straightnewsng.com
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Ambassadorial List: Non-inclusion of Akwa Ibom Person Shocks PDP Member

    November 29, 2025 --- 11:06 pm

    Journalist’s Media Offensive on Governor Umo Eno Triggers Aides’ Salvo  

    November 29, 2025 --- 1:53 am

    PDP Crisis Worsens as Factional Rivalry Tears Party Apart

    November 18, 2025 --- 7:05 pm

    Comments are closed.

    Search
    Our Picks
    Don't Miss
    Judiciary

    Akpabio Sues Natasha for N200bn in Defamation Case over S3xual Harassment Claims

    By straightnewsng.comDecember 6, 2025 --- 10:31 pm0

    Senate President Godswill Akpabio has filed a N20 billion defamation suit against Senator Natasha Akpoti…

    Argentina, Spain Handed Kind Draws For 2026 World Cup (Full List)

    December 5, 2025 --- 10:20 pm

    Supreme Court Declares FG’s Seizure of LG Funds Unconstitutional

    December 5, 2025 --- 9:35 pm

    Nigeria Tax Reforms not Y2K Crisis- Says AKIRS Boss

    December 4, 2025 --- 10:58 pm

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    About Us
    About Us

    The publication is committed to the principles of development journalism. We are prepared to change the public perception that the profession is a harbinger of hate, blackmail, sycophancy, prejudice and falsehood.

    We pledge to use journalism practice to give voice to the voiceless and to give people of all shades of opinions an opportunity to tell their stories.
    We're accepting new partnerships right now.

    Recent Posts
    • Akpabio Sues Natasha for N200bn in Defamation Case over S3xual Harassment Claims
    • Argentina, Spain Handed Kind Draws For 2026 World Cup (Full List)
    • Supreme Court Declares FG’s Seizure of LG Funds Unconstitutional
    • Nigeria Tax Reforms not Y2K Crisis- Says AKIRS Boss
    • Senate Receives Ambassadorial Nominees as Enang, Ibas, Dambazau, 62 Others Make the List
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Advertise With Us
    © 2025 Straightnews Wire Limited

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.