Pierre Poilievre congratulates Carney, pledges to keep fighting
- The Conservative Party won 146 seats but fell short against the Liberal Party's 167 seats in the recent election, as reported by results available by 2 a.m. Tuesday.
- Pierre Poilievre acknowledges the challenges he faces after losing his own seat in Carleton and emphasizes holding the Liberal government accountable despite the defeat.
- Critics cited 'Trump-esque' messaging as a factor in losing moderate voters, prompting calls for a review of Poilievre's leadership.
- New Brunswick Conservatives, while supporting Poilievre, acknowledge he needs to consolidate support within the caucus to stay on as leader after the election loss.
26 Articles
26 Articles
Poilievre’s ethics pitch more about framing Carney as a ‘corrupt politician’ than attempt at reform, but some ideas are good, say observers
Pierre Poilievre is anchoring his ethics reform plan in what he calls 'Accountability Act 2.0,' a nod to the original Federal Accountability Act introduced in 2006 by Stephen Harper's Conservative government.


Opposition leaders call Carney to offer congratulations
Carney spent his first day back on Parliament Hill in meetings. In addition to Trump, he also spoke by phone with Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre and Bloc leader Yves-Francois Blanchet.
Poilievre must secure caucus support to remain leader, 2 N.B. MPs say
New Brunswick Conservatives who won their own seats are standing by their leader, Pierre Poilievre, after the party's defeat by the Liberals in the federal election Monday. But they acknowledge Poilievre has challenges ahead if he wants to stay leader.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 85% of the sources lean Left
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage