It has to hit hard. We have to be very pinpoint and surgical,” said Poilievre, who has drawn comparisons to President Trump.
Canadian Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, who is popular among many American conservatives, vowed to “retaliate” if he is elected prime minister and President Donald Trump starts a “trade war” with his country.
“He waited too long. I think that he had trouble recognizing that his moment had passed and held on, and unfortunately put himself ahead of both the party and the country,” said Garneau, the former foreign affairs and transport minister, in this latest episode of The Corner Booth.
Trudeau and 12 of Canada’s 13 premiers agreed to form a united front and pledge that “everything” is on the table in a potential tariff war with Donald Trump.
Trudeau’s policies went well beyond Biden’s — he passed a federal carbon-pricing system and successfully defended it against several challenges, something Democrats in the United States have never been able to do.
Pierre Poilievre's views on Bitcoin have sometimes attracted controversy, but a lot has changed over the past three years.
Poilievre is generally press-averse, partial to friendly platforms—his own YouTube and Instagram channels, Jordan Peterson’s podcast. The Lake Report pounced, sending both of its reporters. They asked first thing about how Poilievre would handle the government’s support of local journalism.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is rejecting the terms of a briefing from Canada's spy agency regarding foreign interference because it won't enable him to act on the information, his office says.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says he wouldn’t make any “big changes” to the federal equalization program if the Conservatives form government after the next election.
Pierre Poilievre’s recent 100-minute interview with controversial media commentator, Jordan Peterson, provided some clues about the Conservative leader’s political ideology.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is planning a final wave of appointments to fill the 10 vacancies in the Senate before he retires in March, Radio-Canada has learned.The move would allow him to leave a mark on Parliament for years to come,
The Conservative Party leader tells The Globe and Mail Canada must respond with tariffs of its own to counter Trump’s promise to levy 25-per-cent tariffs on Canadian goods