Mark Carney Wins Canada’s Liberal Leadership, All Set To Succeed Trudeau As Prime Minister

Mark Carney Wins Canada’s Liberal Leadership, All Set To Succeed Trudeau As Prime Minister
Mark Carney has secured victory in the leadership race for Canada’s Liberal Party and is set to succeed Justin Trudeau as prime minister.
Carney, aged 59, won 86 per cent of the vote, defeating former Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland. Nearly 152,000 party members took part in the contest.
Trudeau announced in January that he would be stepping down after more than nine years in office. His approval ratings had dropped heavily, prompting the ruling Liberal Party to hold a swift leadership contest to determine his successor.
Trudeau declared in his farewell speech. “Now, as Canadians face, from our neighbour, an existential challenge, an economic crisis, Canadians are showing exactly what we are made of,” he added.
Carney, a newcomer to politics, argued that he was best positioned to revitalise the party and oversee trade negotiations with US President Donald Trump, who has been threatening further tariffs that could impact Canada’s export-reliant economy.
Carney’s victory marks the first occasion in which an outsider with no political background has become Canada’s prime minister. He has stated that his experience as the only person to have served as governor of two G7 central banks makes him the most capable leader to handle Trump.
During his campaign, Carney advocated for a policy of dollar-for-dollar retaliatory tariffs against the United States and a coordinated strategy to encourage investment. He has also criticised the country’s economic growth under Trudeau, saying it was inadequate.
The prospect of a fresh start for the Liberal Party under Carney, combined with Trump’s tariffs and his repeated remarks about annexing Canada as the 51st US state, has led to a revival of Liberal support.
Who is Mark Carney?
Carney, a former central bank governor, has never previously held elected office. Born in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories, in 1965, he studied at Harvard before spending 13 years at Goldman Sachs.
He joined the Bank of Canada as deputy governor in 2003, left for a finance ministry role in 2004, and returned in 2008 as governor, steering the central bank through the 2008-2009 financial crisis.