Episodit
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Liberal Party national campaign co-chair Terry Duguid walks through the rules for the party's race to select a new leader — and prime minister. Former B.C. premier Christy Clark contradicts her political past ahead of her potential run. Plus, Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson weighs in on whether he'll enter the race.
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Liberal Party executives meet as they try to finalize the rules for a leadership race. Liberal MP Chandra Arya explains why he's the first in caucus to announce he'll run, and defends his meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. Plus, B.C. Premier David Eby responds to the provincial Conservatives' call for an inquiry into the 2024 provincial election.
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Minister of Indigenous Services Patty Hajdu and Atlantic Liberal caucus Chair Kody Blois speak to Power & Politics after the Liberals' first caucus meeting since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced he would resign, discussing how a truncated leadership race can unfold and what the field looks like after Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc bowed out. Plus, New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt says premiers will travel to Washington, D.C., on Feb. 12 to present a 'collective unified voice' against tariffs.
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Strategizing for the Liberal leadership begins, as Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne explains why he's "seriously considering" running, and former Liberal MP Frank Baylis makes his pitch as the first to announce his leadership bid. Plus, as president-elect Donald Trump says the U.S. could use "economic force" to absorb Canada, Trudeau says there "isn't a snowball's chance in hell" of it happening.
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Justin Trudeau is promising to step aside as prime minister once the Liberals choose his successor. Parliament is now prorogued. Power & Politics has been covering every moment since Trudeau made the announcement Monday morning, and brings you the reaction from MPs, cabinet ministers, strategists and top figures from past Liberal governments.
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Power and Politics' panel of political insiders — Fred DeLorey, Greg MacEachern and Melanie Richer —on Canadian political stories to watch in 2025.
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Host David Cochrane and Power Panelists Laura D’Angelo, Jordan Leichnitz, Tim Powers and Paul Wells count down the top five political newsmakers of 2024.
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Host David Cochrane and Power Panelists Kate Harrison, Matthew Dubé, Vandana Kattar and Rob Benzie count down the top five political news stories of 2024.
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Liberal MPs Rob Oliphant, Ali Ehsassi and Chandra Arya discuss why they're making their first public calls for Justin Trudeau's resignation on the same day as a cabinet shuffle. Employment Minister Steven MacKinnon explains why he accepted a new file from a prime minister under fire. Plus, the Power Panel debates NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh's announcement that his party will put forward a non-confidence motion at the next opportunity.
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Liberal MP Wayne Long says some cabinet ministers who are publicly supporting Justin Trudeau's leadership are privately telling him they want him gone. Liberal MP Ken Hardie says that after Trudeau takes time to reflect, "I honestly think he will resign." Plus, CBC's chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton and Radio-Canada's Ottawa bureau chief Louie Blouin bring us the latest from their sources on Parliament Hill.
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More than a dozen Liberal MPs have now called publicly for Justin Trudeau to resign as their leader, with most of them coming forward after Chrystia Freeland resigned from cabinet Monday. MPs Alexandra Mendès, Sean Casey and Yvan Baker explain why they want Trudeau gone. Mendès and Casey also say they're convinced he's staying after yesterday's caucus meeting. Plus, Immigration Minister Marc Miller responds to Freeland's resignation letter and breaks down the Liberals' new suite of border promises unveiled today.
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Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon is sending the Canada Post labour dispute to the Canada Industrial Relations Board for what could be an order to return to work; he says he expects mail service to resume next week. A negotiator for the union reacts to Ottawa's intervention. Plus, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe explains why using export taxes as a countermeasure against U.S. tariffs would be a "complete betrayal" by the Trudeau government.
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Alberta Premier Danielle Smith explains the province's $29 million plan to bolster border security and address U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's demands. Plus, Newfoundland and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey explains how a tentative deal with Quebec on the Churchill Falls hydroelectric plant "changes everything" for the province's future.
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New Brunswick Premier Susan Holt explains what the prime minister told premiers about his plan to bolster the border at a second meeting about U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's tariff threat. Plus, a breakdown of the economic threats that drove the Bank of Canada's second consecutive half-point interest rate cut.
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U.S. president-elect Donald Trump made another suggestion that Canada should be part on the U.S. in a Truth Social post on Tuesday. The Power Panel breaks down what spurred the taunt and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith explains what she did for the relationship on a trip to Las Vegas. Plus, Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet says the Bloc supported a non-confidence motion designed to embarrass the NDP leader because he ''deserved to be embarrassed."
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Omar Alghabra, Canada's only MP of Syrian descent, explains why many Syrians abroad are celebrating the collapse of Bashar al-Assad's dictatorship despite uncertainty about the intentions of those seizing power. Plus, the person who chaired the Council of the Federation when CUSMA negotiations began offers negotiating lessons from Donald Trump's first term.
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Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly says the Arctic is no longer a "low-tension region" and defends her government's new Arctic foreign policy from claims that it comes too late to catch up with Russia's northern power. The premiers of Yukon, Nunavut and Northwest Territories weigh in on what it will take to support their residents and secure the region. Plus, CBC's Peter Armstrong breaks down a jump in the unemployment rate.
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The federal government says it has added over 300 models and variants of assault-style firearms to its banned weapons list. The Power Panel discusses whether the additions matter, given the long delay in implementing other Liberal gun policies. Plus, the NDP derails the Conservatives' non-confidence vote.
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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre continues to say Canada's border is "broken," while the other party leaders argue he's playing into U.S. president-elect Donald Trump's hands. The Power Panel debates whether Poilievre is holding the Liberals to account or undermining Canada's position. Plus, NDP finance critic Don Davies explains the party's demands ahead of confidence votes expected next week.
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Opposition leaders met with the prime minister for a briefing on his dinner with U.S. president-elect Donald Trump today, but emerged with both messages of unity and accusations of a broken border and partisanship. Green Party Leader Elizabeth May describes what happened inside. Plus, Government House Leader Karina Gould explains how an order from the Speaker will allow Parliament to pass key spending bills, but won't end the House gridlock for good.
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