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Paige Fusco

51st or Fight: Trudeau leaves, Trump Arrives

Justin Trudeau is leaving you, Donald Trump is coming for you.

The timing couldn’t be worse. The threat couldn’t be bigger. The solutions couldn’t be more elusive.

Canada and the US are headed for a serious and economically dangerous trade war in less than two weeks, and President-elect Donald Trump, seeing Canada in a vulnerable leadership moment, smells blood.

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Canada's Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller speaks at a press conference about the government's border plan as Public Safety and Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc listens, on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Ontario, on Dec. 17, 2024.

REUTERS/Patrick Doyle

Canada does about-face on immigration

Canadian Immigration Minister Marc Miller announced last Friday that Ottawa will pause new parent and grandparent sponsorship applications to address a 40,000-application backlog. Simultaneously, thousands of migrant caregivers find themselves in limbo as the government hits the brakes on proposed pathways to permanent residency, leaving many without legal status.

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Donald Trump faces reporters in the Oval Office on Sept. 11, 2020.

REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Trump vs. world

President-elect Donald Trump is doubling down on threats that the US should take control of the Panama Canal and Greenland, and he isn’t ruling out the use of force to accomplish this. “We need them for economic security,” Trump said at a Tuesday news conference. Grabbing Greenland, says Trump, would allow the US military to track the movements of Chinese and Russian ships. He also continues to suggest that Canada would be a welcome addition to the United States.
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Meta scraps fact-checking program: What next?
- YouTube

Meta scraps fact-checking program: What next?

Ian Bremmer shares his insights on global politics this week on World In :60.

What do you make of Meta ending its fact-checking program?

Well, it's a direct response to Trump's victory and a little late. They probably could have done it a few weeks ago, but they wanted to line up their new board members with people that are more aligned with Trump and also their new head of public policy. Now that Nick Clegg, who was much more oriented to Harris, is gone. So, they're like everybody else, heading to Mar-a-Lago and wanting to get on board with the new administration. That is what's happening. And of course, it means implications for those concerned about safety features on social media are going to grow. This is a complete shift of the pendulum in the other direction.

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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks to reporters, announcing he intends to step down as Liberal Party leader, from his Rideau Cottage residence in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada, on Jan. 6, 2025.

REUTERS/Patrick Doyle

Trudeau steps down, and a leadership race kicks off

On Monday morning, Jan. 6, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addressed reporters on the stairs of Rideau Cottage, his official residence in Ottawa, to announce his resignation. He began by stating that “Parliament has been paralyzed for months. This morning, I advised the governor general that we need a new session of Parliament. The House is prorogued until March 24.”

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Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at the federal Liberal caucus holiday party, the day after Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland unexpectedly resigned, in Ottawa, Ontario, on Dec. 17, 2024.

REUTERS/Carlos Osorio

Chances of Trudeau staying as PM drop quickly

Resignation watch continues as Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is on vacation and mulling his political future. There’s no official word whether the Liberal Party leader will stay or go, but recent weeks have seen the probability of a departure rise.
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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at a meeting of the Calgary Chamber of Commerce in Calgary, Alberta, Canada December 21, 2016.

REUTERS/Todd Korol

Trudeau on the brink? More MPs demand resignation

Bad news for embattled Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: On Saturday, 51 members of his Liberal Party’s powerful Ontario caucus reportedlyagreed that he should resign, citing their plummeting fortunes under his leadership. Over half the Liberal caucus now want him to quit, as well as numerous party advisors, strategists and commentators.

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Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks after signing an infrastructure agreement in Montreal, December 16, 2016.

REUTERS/Christinne Muschi

Trudeau’s Darkest Hour

This is Justin Trudeau’s darkest hour.

Even as he shuffles his Cabinet tomorrow, it will not shuffle his political future. This is the endgame.

Eventually, all successful politicians turn into Dorian Gray — gazing into the mirror and seeing a reflection of beauty they believe voters will find irresistible. All the while, however, somewhere under a parliamentary staircase, a portrait of their political face is being ravaged by time, scandal, and betrayal. That is the bargain leaders inevitably make as they fight to stay in power.

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