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Mark Carney's Liberals fall short of majority in Canadian election

Mark Carney's Liberals fall short of majority in Canadian election

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney's Liberals will form government with a minority, according to Canadian public broadcaster CBC.
The party
The Liberals had 169 confirmed seats with two races left to call in a setback for the party but a result that puts them in strong position to pass legislation, including measures to confront United States President Donald Trump.
Not having an outright majority means Mr Carney's party will have to seek help from another, smaller party in the nation's next parliament.
Elections Canada has processed nearly all the ballots, but there will be at least one mandatory recount and the result of that might not be known for days.
Mark Carney and his wife Diana Fox Carney react after the Liberal Party won the Canadian election in Ottawa on Tuesday, April 29, 2025.
(
AP: Frank Gunn/The Canadian Press
)
Mr Carney's rival, populist Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre, was leading in the election race until three months ago when the US president began a trade war with the country and threatened to annex it as the 51st American state.
The Conservatives had won at least 144 electoral districts as of Tuesday, but Mr Poilievre was voted out of the seat he held for 20 years.
"It was the 'anybody-but-Conservative' factor, it was the Trump-tariff factor, and then it was the [former PM Justin] Trudeau departure … which enabled a lot of left-of-centre voters and traditional Liberal voters to come back to the party," Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus Reid Institute polling firm, told Reuters.
The Liberals, who have been in power since November 2015, were 20 percentage points behind in surveys in January before the unpopular Mr Trudeau announced he was stepping down.
Carney says system of open global trade 'over'
The Globe and Mail newspaper, citing a senior Liberal official, said Mr Carney would name a cabinet and reconvene Canada's House of Commons within two weeks. Another priority will be the annual budget, which is usually presented in March or April.
Mr Carney, saying Mr Trump wanted to break Canada, had repeatedly vowed to open talks on new security and economic ties with the US president as soon as possible after the election.
Photo shows
Conservative Party of Canada's leader Pierre Poilievre speaks to supporters infront of a large Canadian flag at a campaign.
Canadians have gone to the polls, with the ruling Liberal Party poised to retain power after an extraordinary turnaround following Donald Trump's return to the US presidency.
"Our old relationship with the United States, a relationship based on steadily increasing integration, is over," he said in his victory speech in Ottawa on Tuesday.
"The system of open global trade anchored by the United States, … [which] has helped deliver prosperity for our country for decades, is over. These are tragedies, but it's also our new reality."
Mr Carney said the coming months would be challenging and require sacrifices. He has promised a tough approach to Washington's import tariffs and said Canada will need to spend billions to reduce its reliance on the US.
ABC/wires

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Israel military retrieves Thai hostage's body from Gaza
Israel military retrieves Thai hostage's body from Gaza

The Advertiser

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Israel military retrieves Thai hostage's body from Gaza

The Israeli military has retrieved the body of Thai hostage Nattapong Pinta, who had been held in Gaza since Hamas' October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, Defence Minister Israel Katz says. Pinta's body was held by a Palestinian militant group called the Mujahedeen Brigades, and was retrieved from the area of Rafah in southern Gaza, Katz said. His family in Thailand has been notified. Pinta, an agricultural worker, was abducted from Kibbutz Nir Oz, a small community near the border, where one in four people was killed or taken hostage during the Hamas-led 2023 attack that triggered the devastating war in Gaza. The Israeli military said Pinta had been abducted alive and killed by his captors, who had also killed and taken to Gaza the bodies of two more Israeli-American hostages that were retrieved this week. There was no immediate comment from the militant group. 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Pride march through Washington in defiance of Trump
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Pride march through Washington in defiance of Trump

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The National Park Service, however, has decided to fence off Dupont Circle, a popular public space, until Sunday night at the request of the US Park Police, which said closure was necessary to "secure the park, deter potential violence, reduce the risk of destructive acts and decrease the need for extensive law enforcement presences". Capital Pride Alliance, which is organising WorldPride events, said it was "frustrated and disappointed" at the closure. "This beloved landmark is central to the community that WorldPride intends to celebrate and honour," the alliance said. "It's much more than a park, for generations it's been a gathering place for DC's LGBTQ+ community, hosting First Amendment assemblies and memorial services for those we lost to the AIDS epidemic and following tragic events like the Pulse nightclub shooting."

Muslim Vote to support candidates in NSW, Victorian elections
Muslim Vote to support candidates in NSW, Victorian elections

Sydney Morning Herald

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  • Sydney Morning Herald

Muslim Vote to support candidates in NSW, Victorian elections

A pro-Palestine political movement that failed to win a seat at the May federal election has vowed to push on and support candidates for the upcoming Victorian and NSW state elections. The Muslim Vote endorsed independent candidates in three Labor-held seats – Watson and Blaxland in western Sydney and Calwell in Melbourne's north-west. Its greatest success was in Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke's seat of Watson, where independent Ziad Basyouny was the second-most popular candidate on a two-candidate preferred basis. Burke, who was accused of 'vote buying' after holding pre-election mass citizenship ceremonies in Sydney's culturally diverse western suburbs, still comfortably won the seat, receiving 66 per cent of the vote after preferences were distributed. In Education Minister Jason Clare's seat of Blaxland, Ahmed Ouf won 18.76 per cent of first preferences, but the Liberal candidate was second-preferred. In Calwell, Samim Moslih only garnered 6.85 per cent of first preferences. Despite failing to win a seat, Muslim Vote convenor Sheikh Wesam Charkawi said the results were a 'significant step' that 'demonstrated the model works'. In each seat, the independent campaign ate into both Labor and the Liberals' first preference vote distribution from the 2022 federal election. 'One form of success in the political arena is unseating the sitting minister. Another form is winning hearts and minds of the masses, setting the foundations for future challenges,' Charkawi said. 'We've had an avalanche of people reach out to us post-election, either to be candidates or to support our work ... The community isn't backing down. We all want to continue.'

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