Liberal leadership hopeful Karina Gould says she would temporarily cut the federal sales tax on goods and services if her bid to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is successful.
The six candidates running for Liberal leadership have now all registered with Elections Canada, which monitors their fundraising activities as political leadership contestants under the law.
6 Liberal leadership contenders in race
David Screech says his candidacy for the Esquimalt-Saanich-Sooke riding for a federal election has been revoked by the Liberal Party.
Holly Simms discusses the potential candidates for Canadian liberal leadership in the face of an upcoming election.
former Bank of Canada and Bank of England governor Mark Carney has announced his run for leader of Canada's governing Liberal Party. Mr Carney formally launched his bid in his hometown of Edmonton, Alberta, on Thursday at a hockey rink where he learned how ...
Chrystia Freeland announced Friday she will run to become the next leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. Freeland, once a staunch ally of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, announced her intentions ...
Liberal leadership candidate Karina Gould said Thursday that, in a race dominated by two heavyweight candidates, she's trying to stand out from the pack with her ideas.
Quebec Justice Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette has strongly condemned the federal government’s appointment of Robert Leckey — a vocal critic of the province’s secularism law and French language reforms — as a judge on the Quebec Superior Court. Leckey was dean of McGill University’s law faculty but resigned after his appointment on Monday.
Here's a look at the Liberal leadership race and where the candidates stand on First Nation, Inuit and Métis policies.
The next Liberal Party leader remains unknown. Earlier this week, rumours circulated in Ottawa that the Trudeau government is preparing a major tariff response plan—similar in scale to pandemic measures—should the United States follow through on its threat to impose 25% tariffs on Canadian exports.
Singh, who on Thursday spoke at an event with union leaders in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., said he wanted to be “really clear” that his intention to vote non-confidence in the minority Liberals when Parliament resumes at the end of March remains the same.