The Prague Post - Canada votes for new government to take on Trump

EUR -
AED 4.168887
AFN 80.713603
ALL 98.61783
AMD 441.128222
ANG 2.04557
AOA 1041.345024
ARS 1326.565013
AUD 1.777384
AWG 2.042971
AZN 1.933312
BAM 1.953268
BBD 2.289851
BDT 137.791399
BGN 1.955929
BHD 0.427745
BIF 3372.675846
BMD 1.134984
BND 1.490656
BOB 7.836842
BRL 6.456294
BSD 1.13409
BTN 96.812514
BWP 15.632393
BYN 3.711359
BYR 22245.683748
BZD 2.278067
CAD 1.575136
CDF 3265.348627
CHF 0.942258
CLF 0.027676
CLP 1062.061336
CNY 8.271421
CNH 8.284616
COP 4786.862548
CRC 574.043296
CUC 1.134984
CUP 30.077072
CVE 110.122263
CZK 24.967363
DJF 201.951119
DKK 7.465731
DOP 67.081573
DZD 150.289554
EGP 57.64694
ERN 17.024758
ETB 151.354285
FJD 2.566766
FKP 0.852474
GBP 0.850846
GEL 3.109534
GGP 0.852474
GHS 16.671391
GIP 0.852474
GMD 81.718805
GNF 9822.052574
GTQ 8.734678
GYD 237.272454
HKD 8.804473
HNL 29.401243
HRK 7.537084
HTG 148.07828
HUF 405.583064
IDR 19130.15304
ILS 4.110406
IMP 0.852474
INR 96.46994
IQD 1485.674309
IRR 47782.821274
ISK 145.300261
JEP 0.852474
JMD 179.483405
JOD 0.804935
JPY 162.850902
KES 146.749102
KGS 99.254689
KHR 4539.775678
KMF 490.861324
KPW 1021.485478
KRW 1638.525122
KWD 0.348201
KYD 0.945075
KZT 583.983057
LAK 24531.20332
LBP 101613.310447
LKR 339.849496
LRD 226.825994
LSL 21.402758
LTL 3.351312
LVL 0.68654
LYD 6.205738
MAD 10.520464
MDL 19.573939
MGA 5051.341324
MKD 61.532528
MMK 2383.32904
MNT 4052.911514
MOP 9.061255
MRU 45.11453
MUR 51.357906
MVR 17.489944
MWK 1966.50775
MXN 22.157995
MYR 4.954768
MZN 72.639039
NAD 21.402758
NGN 1827.460226
NIO 41.732965
NOK 11.825805
NPR 154.896815
NZD 1.90944
OMR 0.43697
PAB 1.13413
PEN 4.165601
PGK 4.6279
PHP 64.010799
PKR 319.126598
PLN 4.277033
PYG 9071.921502
QAR 4.133742
RON 4.977702
RSD 117.09822
RUB 93.807245
RWF 1606.781941
SAR 4.257803
SBD 9.48201
SCR 16.134994
SDG 681.559843
SEK 10.994365
SGD 1.491057
SHP 0.891919
SLE 25.744168
SLL 23800.025721
SOS 648.145615
SRD 41.859382
STD 23491.874476
SVC 9.923138
SYP 14756.976111
SZL 21.382343
THB 38.185378
TJS 11.998947
TMT 3.983793
TND 3.397696
TOP 2.658241
TRY 43.642389
TTD 7.704014
TWD 36.861324
TZS 3055.982452
UAH 47.430577
UGX 4157.611017
USD 1.134984
UYU 47.348628
UZS 14660.996814
VES 94.557685
VND 29509.580482
VUV 136.858821
WST 3.137076
XAF 655.093456
XAG 0.034428
XAU 0.000346
XCD 3.067351
XDR 0.814726
XOF 655.08481
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.187442
ZAR 21.236173
ZMK 10216.212485
ZMW 31.668836
ZWL 365.464341
  • CMSD

    0.0100

    22.46

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    60.8800

    60.88

    +100%

  • SCS

    -0.0600

    9.89

    -0.61%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.33

    -0%

  • BTI

    -0.4000

    42.05

    -0.95%

  • RIO

    -1.1300

    60.56

    -1.87%

  • BCC

    -0.5800

    95.51

    -0.61%

  • GSK

    -0.0700

    37.43

    -0.19%

  • NGG

    -0.2200

    72.04

    -0.31%

  • AZN

    0.0200

    69.57

    +0.03%

  • RELX

    0.3800

    53.55

    +0.71%

  • BP

    0.1900

    29.19

    +0.65%

  • BCE

    -0.3600

    21.65

    -1.66%

  • RYCEF

    0.0100

    10.16

    +0.1%

  • JRI

    0.1400

    12.74

    +1.1%

  • VOD

    0.0400

    9.35

    +0.43%

Canada votes for new government to take on Trump
Canada votes for new government to take on Trump / Photo: Geoff Robins - AFP

Canada votes for new government to take on Trump

Canada elects a new government on Monday to confront annexation threats from the United States and deal directly with President Donald Trump, whose trade war has defined the campaign.

Text size:

The Liberal Party, led by new Prime Minister Mark Carney, looked set to lose easily to the Conservatives' Pierre Poilievre until the US president's attacks on the country sparked a sudden reversal in poll forecasts.

Carney, 60, has never held elected office and only replaced Justin Trudeau as prime minister last month. He had a lucrative career as an investment banker before serving as the central bank governor in both Canada and Britain.

Carney has argued his global financial experience has prepared him to guide Canada's response to Trump's tariffs.

He has also promised to revitalize internal trade and expand Canada's economic opportunities abroad to cut reliance on the United States, a country Carney says "we can no longer trust."

The United States under Trump "wants to break us, so they can own us," he has warned repeatedly through the campaign.

"We don't need chaos, we need calm. We don't need anger, we need an adult," Carney said in the campaign's closing days.

Poilievre, a 45-year-old career politician, has tried to keep the focus on domestic concerns that made Trudeau deeply unpopular toward the end of his decade in power, especially soaring living costs.

The Tory leader has argued Carney would bring a continuation of what he calls "the lost Liberal decade," arguing that only a new Conservative government can take action against crime, housing shortages and other non-Trump issues Canadians rank as priorities.

"You cannot handle another four years of this," he said over the weekend.

Poilievre has critiqued Trump, but insisted ten years of poor Liberal governance had left Canada vulnerable to a newly hostile United States.

- 'A good pick' -

Final polls indicate a tight race but put Carney as the favorite.

Surveys have also consistently shown voters view the ex-central banker as the best candidate to deal with Trump.

Jeff Sims, who lives in Quebec near Canada's capital Ottawa, said he believes Carney has "the pedigree" to be prime minister.

"Two central banks under his belt, I think that's a good pick," the 46-year-old told AFP on Sunday.

At a weekend Conservative rally in the battleground city of Oakville, west of Toronto, Janice Wyner rejected the notion that Carney marked a departure from Trudeau.

Trudeau's "policies stunk and it's the same party," she told AFP.

"Canada is just in a mess. I'm 70 years old. It's not even a country that I recognize and I'm worried for my grandkids."

Like many voters, Nadine Sokol, a 41-year-old who also lives near Ottawa, listed "the threat coming from the US" as her "number one issue."

- Historic turnaround -

If the Liberals win, it would mark one of the most of dramatic turnarounds in Canadian political history.

On January 6, the day Trudeau announced he would resign, the Conservatives led the Liberals by more than 20 points in most polls, and Poilievre looked on track to be Canada's next prime minister.

But Carney replacing Trudeau combined with nationwide unease about Trump transformed the race.

Public broadcaster CBC's poll aggregator on Sunday put the Liberals' national support at 42.8 percent, with the Conservatives at 38.8 percent.

As with US elections, national polling numbers may not predict a result.

The performance of two smaller parties -- the left-wing New Democratic Party (NDP) and the separatist Bloc Quebecois -- will be closely watched.

In past elections, strong NDP performances in Ontario and British Columbia, and a good showing by the Bloc in Quebec, have curbed Liberal seat tallies, but polls suggest both smaller parties could be facing a setback.

Nearly 29 million of Canada's estimated 41 million people are eligible to vote. A record 7.3 million people cast advanced ballots.

In the massive G7 country which spans six times zones, polls open at 8:30 am local time in the Atlantic province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Canadians will elect 343 members of parliament, meaning 172 seats are needed for a majority. The Liberals won a majority in 2015 but have governed with a minority since 2019.

M.Jelinek--TPP