
Canadian Dispatch: Surge in Quebec may help Liberals secure majority
EDITOR'S NOTE: Given the increased interest in US-Canadian relations and Canadian politics during this time, we'll be looking to run additional Peter Black columns as the situation develops, so expect additional supplemental Canadian Dispatch columns in upcoming editions.
It's pretty clear as it reaches its half-way point, the Canadian general election on April 28 has become a two-horse race.
This is not an unusual thing for Americans, where Democrats and Republicans have been duking it out at all three levels of government for 200 years.
In Canada, however, third parties have had an increasing impact on the outcome of elections, so much so that since 1962, 10 of 20 federal elections resulted in minorities, and since 2004, there have been five out of seven. The current Liberal government is the second of back-to-back minorities.
With that context, poll-watchers are tracking a rather rare phenomenon in this election where the battle has narrowed down to a duel between the Liberals and Conservatives, with the two main third parties fading away.
The simplest explanation is that many voters who normally would have voted for the left-wing New Democratic Party nationally, and the separatist Bloc Quebecois in Quebec, have flocked to the Liberals.
There are two reasons for that: One is that new Liberal Leader Mark Carney, with his unique expertise in managing economic crises, is perceived as ideally suited to manage the chaos, damage and insult Donald Trump is inflicting on Canada.
The other is a general fear and loathing of Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and what a government of his making would mean for Canada.
Before the departure of Justin Trudeau, the Trump attacks, and the arrival of Carney on the scene, Poilievre was looking at a majority. Now, though, if Poilievre has any hope of winning even a minority government, he needs to expand his base and that is not looking promising with the Liberals opening up a consistent lead.
If an election were held this week, the Liberals would win at least a 20-seat majority, with the NDP holding only nine seats and the Bloc 16.
The Bloc's plunge in support is a particularly interesting case because Carney, the very picture of a boring Englishman banker, just doesn't seem like the type to excite French-speaking voters, particularly those who identify with the Bloc's dream of Quebec independence.
Carney is not particularly eloquent in spoken French and lacks a solid grasp of the province's cultural nuances. What minimizes Carney's lack of personal chemistry with Quebecers, however, is the fact he has an exceptionally popular trio of Quebec ministers as key players in his campaign and in his government: Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly (often seen on U.S. TV talking tariffs), Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne, and Steven Guilbeault, an environmentalist warrior.
Quebecers have an historical tendency to vote en masse like a family. For five elections under Pierre Trudeau, for example, the Liberals routinely ran the table, with only a handful of seats going to other parties.
Conservative Brian Mulroney, a fluently bilingual son of Quebec's north shore, dominated Quebec in both his elections as leader (1984, 1988).
When, in 1993, Mulroney quit and left the country in a constitution mess with Quebec on the brink of separation, the Liberals under Jean Chrétien won a majority, but Lucien Bouchard, head of the newly formed Bloc, became leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition, having won the second largest number of seats.
The most startling voter stampede of all in Quebec was in 2011. Thanks to a particularly ineffectual Liberal leader, the unpopularity of then-prime minister Stephen Harper and fatigue with the Bloc, the NDP, under charismatic, Montreal-born leader Jack Layton, won 59 of Quebec's 75 seats. Combined with 44 seats elsewhere in the country, the NDP became, for the first time ever, the Official Opposition.
The Bloc was reduced to four seats in that election and generally written off as a spent force. Not so fast! As the NDP tide in Quebec receded, the Bloc bounced back, and took 32 seats in the last election in 2021.
If current poll projections hold, the Bloc deputation to the federal Parliament could be cut in half, and the Liberals would win the most seats in Quebec since Justin Trudeau claimed 40 in 2015.
Pollsters and pundits caution the race, with less than 20 days to go, is not over. Although voter intentions are highly locked in, with Carney having a gaping lead over Poilievre for preferred prime minister, the two-horse race could tighten.
Hence, when the party leaders, including the head of the two-seat Green Party, face off in French and English debates next week, the stakes will be especially high.
— Peter Black is a radio broadcaster and writer based in Quebec City. He has worked on Parliament Hill in Ottawa, in Montreal as a newspaper reporter and editor, and as a translator and freelance writer. Email him: pmblack@videotron.ca.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
22 minutes ago
- Yahoo
China Urges US to Comply With ‘Hard-Won' Deal After London Talks
(Bloomberg) — China cheered a new framework to defuse trade tensions with the US after two days of intense negotiation, calling on both countries to adhere to the agreement and maintain dialogue to stabilize ties. Trump's Military Parade Has Washington Bracing for Tanks and Weaponry NY Long Island Rail Service Resumes After Grand Central Fire NYC Mayoral Candidates All Agree on Building More Housing. But Where? Senator Calls for Closing Troubled ICE Detention Facility in New Mexico California Pitches Emergency Loans for LA, Local Transit Systems 'As a next step, the two sides should follow the important consensus and requirements reached by the two heads of state on the phone call, further play a good role in the China-US economic and trade consultation mechanism,' Vice Premier He Lifeng said, according to a Wednesday statement published by state broadcaster China Central Television. The two sides should 'show the spirit of good faith in abiding by their commitments and jointly safeguard the hard-won results of the dialogue,' he added. The statement offered no details on the specifics of the framework. The agreement comes after two days of high-stakes trade talks in London that concluded Tuesday night. Both sides said they'd agreed on a framework for implementing the Geneva deal that would revive the flow of sensitive goods between the countries. Despite reaching a truce that suspended drastic tariffs last month, the world's two largest economies later accused each other of violating that accord. US officials said China was stalling exports of rare earth magnets crucial for auto and defense sectors, while Beijing protested Washington's move to impose new curbs on chip design software, jet engine parts and student visas. The latest statement represents a step toward de-escalating a tariff war that had led to a slump in bilateral trade. However, it made no reference to rare earth magnets or US export controls, which had both been a focal point of the talks and main source of tension going into negotiations. The US and Chinese delegations will take that proposal back to their respective leaders, China's trade envoy Li Chenggang told reporters after the talks concluded. New Grads Join Worst Entry-Level Job Market in Years The Spying Scandal Rocking the World of HR Software American Mid: Hampton Inn's Good-Enough Formula for World Domination Cavs Owner Dan Gilbert Wants to Donate His Billions—and Walk Again The SEC Pinned Its Hack on a Few Hapless Day Traders. The Full Story Is Far More Troubling ©2025 Bloomberg L.P. By subscribing, you are agreeing to Yahoo's Terms and Privacy Policy Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Politico
30 minutes ago
- Politico
Ottawa's AI guy
Presented by The Canadian Medical Association Send tips | Subscribe here | Email Canada Playbook | Follow Politico Canada Thanks for reading Canada Playbook. In today's edition: → EVAN SOLOMON maps out his plan for Canada's AI future. → Canada's top judge totally wasn't subtweeting the U.S. in his annual presser. → The auditor general dropped her semi-annual headaches on the Liberals. THE FIRST THING MR. AI — Canada's first AI minister, EVAN SOLOMON, has been dodging Hill journalists since he got a Cabinet gig — and he owns it. 'It is significantly harder to have answers than it is to ask questions,' the former journalist told a Canada 2020 crowd in Ottawa Tuesday. 'Even if you use AI, it turns out it's a little trickier.' (Solomon's chief of staff, ANSON DURAN, has also lightheartedly flicked at using AI in his own social media comms.) — Into the limelight: In his first high-profile speech since his swearing-in nearly a month ago, Solomon revealed the Liberal government's sweeping vision: ensure Canada doesn't get left behind in the global AI race. 'Essentially we are at a Gutenberg-like moment,' Solomon said. He pointed to four pillars under Prime Minister MARK CARNEY's AI industrial policy. → Scale: Fund and champion Canadian AI companies. → Adoption: Encourage businesses to adopt AI, including by offering them tax credits, in an effort to turbocharge productivity. → Trust: Bring in regulations to protect Canadians' privacy and data. → Sovereignty: Build data centers and invest in quantum computing for national defense and security. — But first, context: AI is more than just a tool that brings our ideas to life, Solomon told the crowd. It's not all about planning vacations, writing resumes or meal planning. AI has the ability to shape culture, economies and warfare. — China vs. the West: On Tuesday, DONALD TRUMP's AI czar DAVID SACKS said China is three to six months behind the U.S. in artificial intelligence. In January, the sudden emergence of the China-based DeepSeek AI model R1 led to U.S. stocks dropping significantly — and gave Western governments a new sense of urgency to act. — Competitive spirit: As competition heats up, Canada wants in. Solomon said Canada is a leader in AI research, but has 'become the farm team for bigger places to take our best researchers and commercialize it.' Canada also lacks digital infrastructure, forcing governments and companies to rely on data storage in other countries, binding them to foreign laws — and preventing them from retaining full sovereignty over the data. — It's the economy, stupid: AI is viewed by the Liberal government as a 'key to our economic destiny.' — Problem is: Just 11 percent of Canadian firms are planning to integrate AI into their operations, Solomon said, creating a large barrier for economic growth. — Simply put: Economies that master AI will grow. Those that don't will fall behind, which is 'an existential threat to our future,' Solomon said. 'Canada cannot be left behind. We need to marshal our resources and advance our position in this high-stakes digital arena. So we've got to act now.' — Team player: Solomon has been meeting with AI firms and leaders such as NextAI co-founder AJAY AGRAWAL. He's also working with Government Transformation Minister JOËL LIGHTBOUND to boost productivity; Industry Minister MÉLANIE JOLY to attract investment; and Defense Minister DAVID MCGUINTY to integrate AI and quantum computing. Want more POLITICO? Download our mobile app to save stories, get notifications on U.S.-Canada relations, and more. In iOS or Android . For your radar 'DEMOCRATIC SUPERPOWER' — A year ago, Supreme Court Chief Justice RICHARD WAGNER used his annual press conference to chide the Trudeau government for judicial vacancies. Tuesday's presser brought a different vibe. Wagner reported back on what he's heard during a year's worth of cross-Canada travel meant to build awareness of the country's highest court among Canadians of all stripes. — 2025's angst: 'Throughout the world, autocratic regimes are attacking the media, judicial powers and national institutions. Canadians are seeing this regression in democracy, and are wondering if that could happen here,' Wagner told reporters. — Hmm, what about?: The CBC's OLIVIA STEFANOVICH was first out of the gate to ask what the elephant in the room was pondering. Was any of that angst tied to U.S. President DONALD TRUMP's attacks on the American judiciary? — Nice try: 'I will not aim at a specific country,' Wagner replied. 'When you see governments attacking the media, attacking the judges, attacking the lawyers and universities, of course, that means that there's a good chance that you are in front of a dictatorship, autocratic government.' — Not here: 'While Canada is not a superpower in [the] traditional sense of the word, it is a democratic superpower. In this country, the rule of law is non-negotiable,' Wagner said. THE ROOMS THAT MATTER — It's caucus day on Parliament Hill. — Prime Minister MARK CARNEY will attend caucus and question period. — Carney will join Press Gallery journalists at a garden party outside Rideau Cottage. — At 6 p.m., Navigator hosts its annual summer kickoff party at the Métropolitain. — Alberta Premier DANIELLE SMITH will deliver a keynote address at the Global Energy Show in Calgary. ON THE HILL — Liberal MP CHRIS BITTLE was elected chair of the Procedure and House Affairs Committee. The vice chairs are Conservative MP MICHAEL COOPER and Bloc Québécois MP CHRISTINE NORMANDIN. — The House voted down a non-binding Conservative opposition motion meant to shame the government into presenting a 'fiscally responsible budget' before the Commons rises for the summer. New Democrats joined the Liberals in voting against the motion. For your radar CHECKING THE BOOKS — Auditor General KAREN HOGAN dropped her spring reports Tuesday — a semi-annual batch of nearly guaranteed headlines. Here were the headaches she gave the Liberal benches, in order of attention from major newsrooms: — Canada's incoming fleet of CF-35 fighter jets will be more expensive than anticipated, efforts to build infrastructure required to support the aircraft are years behind schedule, and the Royal Canadian Air Force still faces a stubborn shortage of fighter pilots. Headline: F-35 program facing skyrocketing costs, pilot shortage and infrastructure deficit — The AG flagged serious concerns with contracts awarded to GCStrategies, the firm embroiled in the high-profile ArriveCAN scandal. Hogan pointed to a lack of security clearance documentation in 21 percent of cases, and a lack of records related to 'which contracted resources performed the work, what work was completed, and whether the people doing the work had the required experience and qualifications.' Headline: Feds awarded ArriveCan firm nearly $100 million in contracts, despite issues — Indigenous Services Canada is frequently missing a six-month target for processing applications for on‑reserve housing, financial aid for post-secondary education, and certain health benefits. Headline: Ottawa failing to meet timelines for First Nations registration: Auditor General — The federal procurement department has revised down a pledge to reduce office space by 50 percent — now on track for only 33 percent. Headline: The federal government has been slow to offload office space: auditor general MORNING MUST-CLICKS — Top of POLITICO this morning: GAVIN NEWSOM gains a step in brawl with DONALD TRUMP: 'It'll help Gavin — especially if he gets arrested' — PIERRE POILIEVRE's take on population growth, via Global News: 'We want severe limits … to reverse the damage the Liberals did to our system.' — The New Republic visits Point Roberts, Washington — aka 'The Tiny Border Town Getting Battered by Trump's Tariffs on Canada' — National Post's STEPHANIE TAYLOR poses a question with no obvious answer: In Carney's Cabinet, who's responsible for online harms? — From the Toronto Star: 'Toronto police turn to AI tool to investigate the murders of Barry and Honey Sherman' PROZONE Our latest Pro PM Canada subscriber newsletter by MIKE BLANCHFIELD: Ethical judges 'not the case in many countries'. Other headlines for Pro subscribers: — Lawmakers push Hegseth on Golden Dome plan. — US oil production will fall by end of 2026, EIA predicts. — International students contributed $44B to the US economy in 2023. — Trump energy adviser slams renewables, says focus is on fossil fuels. PLAYBOOKERS Birthdays: HBD to Ontario Cabmin CAROLINE MULRONEY, former Liberal MP MARIO SILVA, former NDP MP and current commentator FRANÇOISE BOIVIN, and McMillan partner TIMOTHY CULLEN and the Toronto Star's SUSAN DELACOURT. HBD+1 to Playbook trivia regular RODDY MCFALL (60!). Noted: Canadians driving to the U.S. dropped by about 38 percent in May compared to the same month last year, a new Statistics Canada report shows. It's the fifth-straight month of decline. — U.S. Secretary of State MARCO RUBIO condemned sanctions levied against Israeli government officials by Canada, the U.K., Norway, Australia and New Zealand. Spotted: Prime Minister MARK CARNEY, raising the Pride flag on Parliament Hill alongside MPs from all parties. Movers and shakers: Sen. MARY JANE MCCALLUM has joined the Senate Conservative caucus. Lobby watch: Agnico Eagle Mines posted meetings in May with Energy and Natural Resources Minister TIM HODGSON, Deputy Minister MICHAEL VANDERGRIFT, as well as senior political aides and public servants … The Explorers and Producers Association of Canada posted a May 23 meeting with Hodgson, Vandergrift and Liberal MP COREY HOGAN (now also Hodgson's parlsec). TRIVIA Tuesday's answer: Former NDP MP SVEND ROBINSON, who won seven elections — and was Canada's first openly gay MP — lost comeback bids in 2006 and 2019. Props to SVEND ROBINSON (the one and only), CHRISTINA DE TONI, BRENNAN GOREHAM, JOHN PEPPER, LUCAS MALINOWSKI, JOHN ECKER, ALEXIS CONRAD, CHRIS RANDS, JOSEPH PLANTA, TIM MCCALLUM, LORETTA O'CONNOR, BRANDON RABIDEAU, NANCI WAUGH, MARCEL MARCOTTE, ALEX BALLINGALL, PATRICK DION, MATTHEW DUBÉ, BARRY MCLOUGHLIN, DAVE PENNER, PAUL PARK, DAVID LJUNGGREN, MARC LEBLANC, MICHAEL POWELL, JOHN DILLON, MATT CONLEY, BOB PLAMONDON, SCOTT MCCORD, RAY DEL BIANCO, GREG MACEACHERN, MARJORY LEBRETON, DAN ALBAS, CULLY ROBINSON, ELIZABETH BURN, GREG LYNDON, RALPH LEVENSTEIN, SUSAN KEYS, MALCOLM MCKAY, RODDY MCFALL, BOB ERNEST, AVIGAIL RUCKER, COLIN MCKONE, JEFFREY VALOIS, CHRIS LALANDE, ANTHONY CARRICATO, EDDIE HUTCHINSON, ROBERT MCDOUGALL, DARRYL DAMUDE, YAROSLAV BARAN, STEPHEN HAAS, BOB GORDON, RONALD LEMIEUX, ANNE MCGRATH and FRANCIS DOWNEY. Wednesday's question: Which world leader delivered a speech in the House of Commons on this day in 1996? Answers to canadaplaybook@ Writing tomorrow's Playbook: NICK TAYLOR-VAISEY and MICKEY DJURIC. Canada Playbook would not happen without: Canada Editor Sue Allan, editor Willa Plank and POLITICO's Grace Maalouf.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
US and China ‘back to square one' after two days of trade talks
Talks between the US and China are 'back to square one' after two days of trade negotiations in London failed to secure a major deal. US commerce secretary Howard Lutnick said the two sides had agreed on a 'framework' to put their trading relations back on track and repair the truce initially agreed in Geneva last month. There was little market reaction to the announcement at Lancaster House shortly after midnight, with the dollar strengthening a little and stock markets opening marginally higher. The two sides have until August 10 to negotiate a more comprehensive agreement to ease trade tensions, or US tariffs on China will snap back from about 30pc to 145pc, with China's levies on America increasing from 10pc to 125pc. Josh Lipsky, of the Atlantic Council's GeoEconomics Center in Washington, said: 'They are back to square one but that's much better than square zero.' Deutsche Bank analyst Jim Reid added: 'While the mood music has stayed positive, investors may be wary of the pattern that emerged during the previous US-China trade talks in 2018-19, when apparently constructive in-person meetings seemed to take a step back as the negotiating teams returned to their capitals. 'So there's perhaps a little disappointment this morning that we haven't yet got a bigger announcement, even though there's time to hear the full conclusions of the meeting.' Top officials from Washington and Beijing had gathered in London after accusations from both sides that they had violated the terms of the deal made in Switzerland. Donald Trump and Xi Jinping held a call last week which Mr Lutnick said 'gave the fundamental foundation on which we were able to reach agreement'. Mr Lutnick said: 'We have reached a framework to implement the Geneva consensus and the call between the two presidents. 'The idea is we're going to go back and speak to President Trump and make sure he approves it. 'They're going to go back and speak to President Xi and make sure he approves it, and if that is approved, we will then implement the framework.' In a separate briefing, China's vice commerce minister Li Chenggang also said a trade framework had been reached in principle that would be taken back to US and Chinese leaders. Mr Lutnick said China's restrictions on exports of rare earth minerals and magnets to the US would be resolved as a 'fundamental' part of the framework agreement. He also said the agreement would remove some of the recent US export restrictions, but did not provide details. Kathleen Brooks, research director at XTB, said: 'Overall, the US-China trade agreement is taking its time, and it could test the market's patience.' Meanwhile, the European Union reportedly believes it could extend its trade negotiations with the US beyond the initial deadline next month. The EU thinks there could be scope for further talks if it agrees a deal in principle by July 9, which is considered its best-case scenario, according to Bloomberg. The Trump administration is scheduled to enforce 50pc tariffs on EU goods beyond that date unless a deal is reached. Broaden your horizons with award-winning British journalism. Try The Telegraph free for 1 month with unlimited access to our award-winning website, exclusive app, money-saving offers and more. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data