OTTAWA — Liberal Leader Mark Carney is promising a “seamless” and “quick” transition after meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Monday, but has yet to say when he intends to formally take power. “It’ll be quick. We’ll be coming back to you soon. The good news is that you will be seeing probably more of me than you want,” Carney told reporters on Parliament Hill, pledging he would soon announce next steps.
While Carney is now officially the leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, he has yet to become the prime minister, though the transition process is already well underway.
“I’m honoured by the mandate I received from the Liberal Party,” Carney told CTV News Monday on his way into a building he’ll soon be spending much more time in.
Carney won the Liberal leadership with nearly 86 per cent of the vote on Sunday, handily beating the three other candidates in all 343 ridings.
One day after his landslide win, Carney also met with the Liberal caucus, whose morale just a few months ago was as down as the party was in the polls, but who now say they have renewed optimism about their electoral chances.
“There is tremendous energy in the Liberal caucus,” Carney said in his post-caucus scrum. “As you saw last evening, this is a united party full of energy to serve Canadians.”
Trudeau has said he has no intentions of trying to stay on in a caretaker capacity and is looking forward to handing over the reins to his “duly elected successor in the coming days or week,” but a date for that transition has yet to be announced.
The prime minister had said he wanted to have a conversation with his successor before deciding on his official resignation date and how long of a transition would be needed.
This is what the pair discussed Monday morning.
“A lot of wood to chop,” Carney said before the meeting, adding that he was “very much looking forward” to it. Afterwards, he said they spoke “at length on issues around transition.”
Trudeau, Carney talk transition
Procedurally speaking, once the men decide when the reins will be handed over, there will be a series of measures taken.
Trudeau will have to visit the Governor General and officially tender his resignation. Carney will have to swear the requisite oaths of office and allegiance and unveil his new ministry, which includes all his cabinet picks.
The current speculation is that this formal process at Rideau Hall could take place as soon as Tuesday or Wednesday.
Outgoing, incoming PMs ‘feeling good’
Asked how he was feeling on Monday morning, Carney said he was “feeling very good.”
He said his “first order businesses” was “to see the prime minister,” but also spoke about what his message will be to premiers amid the ongoing trade tensions with the United States.
CTV News has learned that as soon as Carney left the stage post-victory speech, Privy Council Office officials — the bureaucrats who support the prime minister and cabinet — pulled him into a 45-minute briefing.
Carney then attended a victory party at Ottawa’s Horticulture Building in the Glebe neighbourhood, which was attended by around 300 people.
CTV News has also learned that former Liberal cabinet minister and outgoing Toronto area MP Marco Mendicino is expected to step in as Carney’s chief of staff. He was seen alongside Carney on the Hill on Monday.
‘The right person for the moment’
Carney spent some of his first afternoon on the job meeting with the Liberal caucus, with the MPs who came to town for the leadership convention meeting their new leader in-person in the caucus’ usual West Block meeting room.
On their way in, MPs spoke about potential election timing, and why they think their new leader gives Liberals a better shot at re-election, in a campaign that could be called in a matter of days.
Karina Gould, who placed third in the leadership contest, told reporters the next election “will definitely be before October.
“I think the country is asking for an election. I do hear that. I think it’s time for a government to earn a mandate to take on what is the foremost threat right now, and that’s Donald Trump,” said Liberal MP Peter Fragiskatos.
Chrystia Freeland also attended the meeting, after coming a distant second to Carney. She told reporters she was “very excited about hearing from our new leader Mark and I’m excited about us winning the next election.”
“The moment calls for us to have an experienced individual and an experienced government that has the ability to manage the very challenging circumstances that we face,” said Liberal MP Ben Carr, who endorsed Freeland. “He is the right person for the moment.”
In Carney’s post-win remarks, he thanked all of the ministers who “remained in their posts to serve Canada directly at this time of great peril.” He also called Liberal MPs “the conscience of our party.”
In a fundraising email to Liberal supporters on Monday morning, Carney said he was “deeply honoured” to be elected and “won’t let you down.”
“I’m grateful to all my fellow candidates. Each ran with passion, dedication, and a sincere desire to serve Canada. I look forward to working closely with everyone of them in the days ahead,” he said.
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre also spoke on Parliament Hill Monday afternoon.
The federal Conservatives started sharpening their attack lines about the new Liberal leader weeks before he was elected, as polls started to show the official opposition’s wide lead start to narrow upon Trudeau’s resignation and U.S. President Donald Trump’s inauguration.
This effort has seen Poilievre’s party roll out advertising and issue multiple statements and fundraising emails questioning Carney’s economic aptitude, his record as a Trudeau adviser, and his personal ethical disclosures.
“He’s just like Justin, and he’s more of the same,” Poilievre said. “We have the same Liberal MPs, the same Liberal advisers… who will produce the same Liberal results.”
The Conservative leader faced a series of questions from reporters about his experience, polling suggesting more Canadians trust Carney to handle Trump, and whether he’d asked his caucus and candidates to not wear “MAGA” [Make America Great Again] merchandise.
“My instruction is that we should put Canada first,” Poilievre said in response. “I’ve also made it clear to my members of Parliament that we should favour bringing jobs back to Canada, not move them to the United States of America, as Mark Carney did when he had the chance.”
This was a reference to Carney’s involvement in a decision to move the headquarters of an asset firm he chaired from Toronto to New York, around the time Trump started threatening tariffs. Carney’s campaign has said “Canadian operations were not impacted.”
No comments:
Post a Comment