Canadians head to the polls today to determine whether the leftist Liberal Party should be allowed to continue to govern the country after ten years in power—under the woke Justin Trudeau—or hand over the reins to the Conservative Party.
The two parties are neck and neck in the opinion polls, both expected to receive around 40% of the votes.
Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre has tried to keep the focus on domestic concerns that made Trudeau deeply unpopular toward the end of his decade in power, especially soaring living costs.
The Tory leader has argued Carney would bring a continuation of “the lost Liberal decade,” arguing that only a new conservative government can take action against crime or housing shortages.
The Liberal Party has been led by interim Prime Minister Mark Carney since March— a former central banker infamous for his Brexit scaremongering and deep ties to globalist institutions.
Reacting to U.S. President Donald Trump’s global tariffs he has said that the United States is a country “we can no longer trust.”
The Justin Trudeau-led government’s policies drew sharp criticism for their authoritarian undercurrents masked as progressive reform.


