rayiner 11 hours ago

Note that he’s only Prime Minister temporarily. He’s replacing Trudeau and will call elections soon (must be before October) and will go up against Poilievre.

EDIT: Didn’t mean to suggest he won’t win the election. But he’ll have to defend the seat.

  • Macha 11 hours ago

    Potentially temporarily - the tariffs and 51st state rhetoric has really shifted the polling there from an easy conservative win to a liberal resurgence

    • snapplebobapple 9 hours ago

      That's not really accurate. What we have is one unhinged far left polster (ekos) doing very questionable thing to skew the average and some weirdness out of ipsos occasionally. You can see many of the individual polls here: https://338canada.com/polls.htm I'm not going to bother posting the deleted twitter rants from the guy that runs ekos, but he's ruining his reputation right now because nobody will believe him after this. Carney got the new guy bump and now that people are getting to know him the polls look uglier for him each week because he's one of the architects of the policies that are so unpopular.

      • dralley 4 hours ago

        Every poll shows a massive liberal resurgence. Only a few suggest that they're currently in the lead.

        • snapplebobapple an hour ago

          Yes, I provided you a list of the vast majority of polling that has happened going all the way back to 2021. There was even a nice graph that does show the resurgence you are talking about but also mostly shows it's not anywhere near enough to change the result from conservative majority, pretty much except for ekos polling (there are some other shenanigans going on in here but they are kind of minor compared to the bold face lying with statistics ekos is almost certainly doing). This is the new guy bump to largely unknown Carney from terrible trudeau. Carney is getting known now and getting linked to all the same stupid things that pissed people off about trudeau and you will see his poll results slide every week here as that process happens. It's not going to help him that he is going to get absolutely crushed in the english debate and absolutely crushed without realizing it because his french is terrible in the french debate either.

  • GypsyKing716 11 hours ago

    We need to just deal with some squirrels in the pack looking for nuts, but I think Poilievre if he wins will fix the West Coast problems tuque-svet

jasoneckert 11 hours ago

The speeches tonight by Chrétien and Carney were quite powerful and succinct. There were a lot of gems in there that will likely go viral on US and Canada news networks.

But what struck me the most from the speeches was the strong sense of certainty that Carney is the right person to take Canada into the next decade.

from-nibly 11 hours ago

> Mark Carney steps into an unprecedented moment

Allow me to be obtuse, and correct me if I'm wrong here, but isn't every moment unprecedented? Like, isn't that how time works?

  • gnabgib 11 hours ago

    Certainly the press' use of unprecedented has precedent.

  • hyperbrainer 6 hours ago

    Some things are more predictable than others. The current situation between the USA and Canada lies on the improbable side of the spectrum.

abe94 11 hours ago

I keep forgetting this is the same Mark Carney that ran the bank of England

  • cperciva 11 hours ago

    And before that, the Bank of Canada.

ghssds 11 hours ago

"Les canadiens et les canadiens sont inquiets du cul de la vie!" --Mark Carney.

The next few years will be delightful.

  • classichasclass 11 hours ago

    Okay, my schoolboy French is tres terrible, but am I translating this correctly? "The Canadians and the Canadians are worried about the ass of life"?

    • hn_throwaway_99 10 hours ago

      Also schoolboy French speaker, but my assumption is that it's a malapropism: "Les Canadiens sont inquiets du coût de la vie!" would mean "Canadians are worried about the cost of living", and my guess is "cul de la vie" is how some heard his accent.

    • healsdata 11 hours ago

      Apparently his French is pretty terrible too.

      > Carney tripped up, most notably when he said, “we agree with Hamas,” instead of “we agree about Hamas,” to the delight of Conservatives all over social media.

  • WorkerBee28474 11 hours ago

    Years? This guy's tenure will be best measured in weeks.

    • tomek_zemla 11 hours ago

      Why is that?

      • WorkerBee28474 11 hours ago

        The next Canadian federal election will be no later than October 20, 2025. Possibly much sooner.

        While Carney's party has seen a bump in the polls recently (thanks to Trump) which changed the predicted result from an opposition blowout to merely an opposition lead, Carney is nowhere near as good a communicator as Trudeau and will likely not do well in the polls.

      • cyberlurker 11 hours ago

        It sounds like the person you’re replying to thinks Carney's Liberal Party is set to lose the upcoming election. Before Trump started going after Canada, the Conservatives seemed like a sure bet to take over Parliament. But since the tariffs came into play, the Liberals have really picked up steam. No matter where you stand politically, I think Trump isn’t the best at thinking strategically. He could have waited for the next Canadian election and probably ended up with a party in power that would be easier to negotiate with. Now, things are a lot less certain, and it could even give the Liberals a chance to come back stronger. It’ll be interesting to see how it all plays out. Plus, it’s kind of idiotic that Trump pushed for the USMCA, which looked like a win for him, but these tariffs seem to go against the spirit of that agreement. It makes you wonder why anyone would want to deal with him in good faith moving forward.

Freedom2 10 hours ago

Interesting to read the perspective of Americans who don't understand that different countries have different election systems, and that Canada doesn't directly elect their PMs.

  • snehk 5 hours ago

    Neither does the US (President or PM, which they don't have). ;)

nayuki 11 hours ago

> On that note, he announced the carbon tax would soon be cancelled.

I'm super-disappointed. The carbon tax is the most effective market-based mechanism for controlling carbon dioxide emissions. The majority of economists support it, while political support trails behind significantly.

Also, it's disingenuous to only focus on axing the carbon tax without mentioning that the quarterly refund to every resident of Canada will also be axed. The carbon tax is designed as a revenue-neutral program.

  • icegreentea2 11 hours ago

    Carbon tax is toxic in Canada. Bashing it is like a quarter of the conservative's platform.

    There's an interview with the former Minister of Environment who pushed through carbon pricing (https://thetyee.ca/News/2025/02/11/Catherine-McKenna-Intervi... - note this is a thoroughly left leaning newspaper). She notes that she felt the government's failure to properly communicate/advertise about how carbon pricing works (and the refunds I imagine...) left the field wide open for the conservatives to own the messaging and framing.

    It is disappointing, but not at all unexpected.

    • snapplebobapple 9 hours ago

      It's more that it's a dumb idea in the face of other government regulations making it impossible to substitute (looking at you mostly zoning making walking, biking, and public transit best case being extremely inconvenient vs car and severely limiting accommodation choice to mostly very low density car required single family or a very small supply mostly ancient missing middle options or sky scrapers.) This makes the carbon tax need to be very high to change behavior which has knock on effects in the less easily substitutable stuff we all need like food transport that makes every noticeably poorer even when they are getting reimbursed for most to all of their primary carbon tax payments. It doesn't help that close by competitors don't have this tax and can incentivize various companies to leave for greener pastures.

      So it's not that it was improperly communicated, pretty much every Canadian understands what is going on. It's that it's dumb without a myriad of other changes to regulation at various other levels of government that should have been changed first. That the feds went at it alone meant it would inevitably be their downfall (all the other really questionable/borderline criminal things this government has done is bonus material)

    • mitthrowaway2 10 hours ago

      For those of us not already determined to vote conservative, the carbon tax was one of the most compelling reasons to vote liberal. It was a well designed policy, even if many people don't understand it.

      Since they're both axing the tax anyway, that's one less differentiator which leaves me thinking maybe I should just choose based on who is more likely to pop the real estate bubble.

      • icegreentea2 10 hours ago

        Fair enough.

        But overall polling is pretty clear (this is from Jan 2024, but I imagine it's probably pretty similar now) https://abacusdata.ca/carbon-tax-pollution-pricing-carbon-ac...

        31% say they won't vote liberals regardless of carbon tax, 23% say they won't vote liberal because of, or partly because of carbon tax, 38% says their liberal support is carbon pricing agnostic, and 8% says carbon pricing makes liberals more attractive.

jarsin 11 hours ago

[flagged]

  • dralley 11 hours ago

    Nobody thinks this is funny.

    • jarsin 11 hours ago

      [flagged]

      • mindslight 11 hours ago

        2019 called. It wants its denial chant back. Personally, I'd rather be an American than a Trumpist. And to our friendly neighbors up north - I'm sorry, you don't deserve this.

        • rayiner 11 hours ago

          [flagged]

          • mindslight 10 hours ago

            Oh. Cheering for wanton cruelty as our country's economy is deliberately destroyed is popular? Carry on, I guess.

  • rayiner 11 hours ago

    Actually it will be the 29th state of india.

GypsyKing716 11 hours ago

Sorry to hear this news. I don't want to spoil the party, but the bucking heads between both countries, especially as a border town dual-citizen, its only going to make living in the Canada that much more difficult for me. The US economy is 9x bigger and with a population of 45M vs. 325M+ - its crazy. Ontario dominates the political spectrum (just a point of fact, not of affiliation) it doesn't allow for collaboration across the provinces. BC and AB are booming, and Ontario just keeps stagnating their innovation trains and economic prosperity and we're likely to see this continue into the future as Toronto and Ottawa just dictate the population as a whole from a central "neck of the woods" thinking.

God save the King, but at what cost?!

Love you Americans. I'm sorry, we're assholes when it comes to nationalism sometimes, but its just going to be difficult for a few years for us.

  • sdesol 10 hours ago

    > I'm sorry, we're assholes when it comes to nationalism sometimes

    Please speak for yourself, as a fellow Canadian. This is not about nationalism, but rather about not giving into a bully. If we start begging for mercy now, things will just get worst. And no, most Canadians do not fear the US invading, as many believe a civil war in the US will happen before that. We also have the luxury of having goodwill among many around the world, so selling our goods will not be an issue but we will obviously have to lower our margins to overcome geographical barriers.

    I just want to make it clear for any readers here that GypskyKing716 is not the voice for all Canadians, and his voice is his own, like mine is.

  • Karsone 11 hours ago

    Canada is a top 10 country by GDP, I think they'll be fine.

    • GypsyKing716 11 hours ago

      Ya, but we rely on so much from Sask to Montreal on border money.