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Trudeau brushes off leadership threats as he prepares to have caucus tomorrow

Liberal MPs have signed onto a closely guarded letter that aims to convince him to step aside
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives to Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, Oct. 22, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his leadership of the Liberal party is not in danger, even as members of his caucus prepare to confront him Wednesday in the hopes of convincing him to step down.

He brushed off those concerns as he headed into the regular Tuesday meeting with cabinet ministers 鈥 and one by one, those ministers expressed their support for Trudeau.

鈥淎nybody who has ever bet against Justin Trudeau is sorry they made that bet the next day,鈥 said Employment Minister Randy Boissonnault.

The cabinet meeting lasted nearly twice as long as usual. Afterward, Innovation Minister Fran莽ois-Philippe Champagne described it as a 鈥渧ery good meeting.鈥

Even as Trudeau and his cabinet insist it鈥檚 business as usual, a number of Liberal MPs have signed onto a closely guarded letter that aims to convince him to step aside before the next election.

It鈥檚 not clear how many members of Trudeau鈥檚 team of MPs plan to confront him, or exactly what their message will be, but a caucus revolt could pose the most serious challenge to Trudeau鈥檚 leadership to date.

Charlottetown MP Sean Casey is the only Liberal to publicly say that he has signed the letter.

Still, there is no way for the Liberal caucus to force him out, so the decision about whether to stay or go will ultimately be up to the prime minister.

The attempted revolt is happening at the same time as a near-total paralysis in the House of Commons, as the Conservatives continue to filibuster a privilege motion related to a green-tech fund that was disbanded by the government over misspent funds.

The Tories have pledged to continue the debate, which has superseded almost all other business in the House for 12 sitting days, until the government hands over unredacted documents about the fund so Parliament can turn them over to the RCMP. The Liberals have refused to do so.

The Bloc Qu茅b茅cois has offered to help put an end to the debate 鈥 so long as the Liberals approve the funding for a private member鈥檚 bill that would boost old age security for all seniors, and help hurry along another bill to protect supply management that is currently in the Senate.

If the Liberals refuse, the Bloc says it will start working with the Conservatives and NDP next week to bring the government down.

鈥淲e cannot avoid noticing that there鈥檚 nothing happening in this government. It is being eaten from inside and being attacked from outside and nothing is happening,鈥 Bloc Leader Yves-Fran莽ois Blanchet said Tuesday.

鈥淭he whole story is now: what will Justin Trudeau, superstar, do in the coming days? There鈥檚 no management of the Canadian affairs and that is a problem. We are currently the only ones trying to do something.鈥

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland would only say that the government is still in talks with the NDP and the Bloc. The minority Liberals need the support of one of the opposition parties to continue to pass bills, and the NDP is now taking each vote on a case-by-case basis after ending a supply-and-confidence deal with the government last month.

NDP House leader Peter Julian called the government 鈥渞udderless,鈥 with Parliament paralyzed and the Liberal caucus focused on bringing down its own leader.

Immigration Minister Marc Miller, who is also Trudeau鈥檚 personal friend, spoke out against MPs who hope to oust the leader.

鈥淎ny minute spent on this garbage is a minute that鈥檚 not spent on Pierre Poilievre and what he wants to do to this country,鈥 Miller told reporters.

Other ministers suggested a healthy debate within caucus was the best way to pull the team together.

鈥淎ny time there are voices of dissent we have to deal with them, we have to listen to them carefully,鈥 Labour Minister Stephen MacKinnon said.

鈥淲e have to deal with them and present a unified face to Canadians.鈥

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre goaded the prime minister about the potential revolt during question period on Tuesday.

鈥淭he reality is he can鈥檛 administer the government because he鈥檚 too busy fighting for his job after nine years. Even his MPs know it,鈥 Poilievre said.





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