Trudeau prorogues Parliament, will step down as prime minister after leadership race
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 06/01/2025 (271 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
OTTAWA – As a tearful Justin Trudeau outlined his plans to resign as Liberal leader and prime minister on Monday, he put the country on track for an early election featuring a new party flagbearer for the first time in a decade.
Once seen as the Liberal saviour who lifted a battered party brand up from the ashes, Trudeau came up against a groundswell of pressure from party rank-and-file to step aside as the public soured on his government and grew hungry for change.
The questions now are when exactly the election will come, and who will vie to become Trudeau’s successor, tasked with the herculean feat of raising the party back up from the depths.
After more than a year of plummeting poll numbers and surging pressure from within his own caucus to step aside, he informed Canadians on Monday he will step aside as soon as a new leader is chosen.
“This country deserves a real choice in the next election and it has become clear to me that if I’m having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best option in that election,” Trudeau said outside his official residence in Ottawa.
Trudeau said he reflected on his political future over the holidays and told his three kids about his decision over dinner Sunday.
He also said Gov. Gen. Mary Simon has agreed to his request to prorogue Parliament until March 24.
Trudeau had consistently signalled over the past year he intended to remain at the helm despite growing calls he step down. But the decisive blow that shattered his grip on the party reins came when Chrystia Freeland suddenly resigned as minister of finance and deputy prime minister on Dec. 16, after Trudeau had informed her he was going to move her out of the finance portfolio.
Her departure, hours before she was to table the fall economic statement in the House of Commons, sent shock waves through the governing party.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announces his resignation as Liberal leader and prime minister outside Rideau Cottage in Ottawa on Monday, Jan.6, 2025. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Questions about Trudeau’s future have swirled since support for his party began to tumble in 2023. The Liberals have trailed the Conservatives by more than 20 points for more than a year now.
Trudeau said he asked for Parliament to be prorogued because the House of Commons has been paralyzed for months through obstruction and needs a reset. This move will shutter the House for two months, wipe clear the current slate of legislation and delay any opportunities for non-confidence votes that could trigger an election until it resumes in spring.
“It’s time for the temperature to come down, for people to have a fresh start in Parliament to be able to navigate through these complex times domestically and internationally,” he said. “Removing me from the equation as the leader who will fight the next election for the Liberal party should also decrease the level of polarization we’re seeing right now in the House and in Canadian politics.”
Trudeau said he asked Liberal party president Sachit Mehra Sunday night to immediately launch a leadership race ahead of the next election.
Mehra said in a statement he will call a national board meeting this week to begin the process to select a new leader. Details about the timing of the race have not yet been announced, although Liberal MPs were briefed virtually Monday afternoon on the party constitution and next steps in the leadership process.
The spotlight now will be cast on long-suspected leadership aspirants such as Freeland, Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc, former central banker Mark Carney, Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly, Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne and a cast of others.

Candidates will have to scramble to launch speedy campaigns as they jostle under tight time constraints to organize and claim the mantle as the best to take on popular firebrand Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.
A spokesperson said Poilievre is away on a family vacation and will respond to Monday’s events later this week.
Trudeau’s decision injected a hefty dose of optimism into Liberal MPs who were just recently at wit’s end over Trudeau’s insistence he stay on.
Montreal MP Anthony Housefather told The Canadian Press he believes there is still enough time for a new leader to establish themselves on the national stage and run a competitive election campaign.
“Nobody knows what the future brings or how well we’ll do, but I’m confident that we’ll do better in the next election because of this process and because of the opportunity to offer a fresh face with new ideas to the country,” he said.

Ontario MP and former cabinet minister Helena Jaczek said she felt a sense of sadness knowing this would be a “very hard decision” for the fighter in Trudeau, but she also felt relief, since it presents a chance for renewal.
Jaczek said between responding to the COVID pandemic and its aftermath, Trudeau may have become “unaware” of how Canadians feel on grassroots issues like cost of living.
“There were a whole lot of issues that perhaps we could have addressed a little more quickly,” she said.
Liberal MP Wayne Long said this marks Day 1 of the party’s rebuild and will give the party a fighting chance in the next election.
“This shouldn’t be a Pierre Poilievre coronation,” he said.
While the next election must be held by this October, spring or early summer are much more likely given the precarious minority Parliament that has all three main opposition parties pronouncing they’re ready to bring the government down in a confidence vote.

Poilievre sought to cast Trudeau’s move as a desperate political play by a sputtering Liberal party, whose MPs stood by their leader right up until he cratered in the polls and was no longer a viable candidate.
“Their only objection is that he is no longer popular enough to win an election and keep them in power,” Poilievre said in a statement. “They want to protect their pensions and paycheques by sweeping their hated leader under the rug months before an election to trick you, and then do it all over again.”
After supporting the Liberals through confidence votes last fall, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh first said Trudeau needed to resign on Dec. 20, after Freeland’s cabinet departure. Now, the NDP leader says his party will topple the government at the first chance, likely through a vote on the throne speech when Parliament returns.
“New Democrats will be voting against this government for an election where Canadians will have a choice,” Singh said. “It doesn’t matter who the leader is, the Liberals have let you down. They do not deserve another chance.”
In his nearly decade-long tenure as prime minister, Trudeau ushered the country through a global pandemic, renegotiation with the U.S. of Canada’s most important free-trade deal and a destabilized geopolitical environment following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau looks on during a cabinet swearing-in ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa, on Friday, Dec.20, 2024. Trudeau has called a news conference in Ottawa this morning amid growing calls for his resignation. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick
Some of his most prominent policies have included introducing a controversial carbon-pricing regime that his political rivals campaigned against, legalizing recreational cannabis and introducing a ramped-up child-benefit payment based on income levels.
Trudeau’s close friend and former principal secretary Gerald Butts said in an online briefing by the Eurasia Group Monday that there’s not much Trudeau could have done differently to hold on, since most Canadian prime ministers have a political best-before date of 10 years.
“Sometimes in politics, the most difficult thing to come to terms with is that there are elements of your fate that are outside of your control and the clock is the No. 1 element,” he said. “He’s a historically consequential prime minister and history has a way of separating the wheat from the chaff over time.”
Trudeau’s decision comes two weeks before Donald Trump is sworn back into office as president of the United States and Trudeau will remain at the helm during what is expected to be a rocky start to Trump’s second term in the Oval Office. Trump has threatened to impose steep import tariffs on all Canadian goods the day he is inaugurated.
Ontario Premier Doug Ford said after Trudeau’s announcement that Ottawa “must urgently explain to Canadians” how it will avoid economically devastating tariffs.
Canadian Chamber of Commerce CEO Candace Laing said Trudeau read the room correctly and made the right call.

“His resignation marks a turning point as Canada tackles unprecedented domestic and international challenges,” she said. “Canada’s next prime minister must hit the ground running and be laser-focused on strengthening the Canada-U.S. trade relationship.”
This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 6, 2025.
Notable quotes
“Canadians desperate to turn the page on this dark chapter in our history might be relieved today that Justin Trudeau is finally leaving. But what has really changed? Every Liberal MP in power today and every potential Liberal leadership contender fighting for the top job helped Justin Trudeau break the country over the last nine years.”
— Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre
“The problem is not just Justin Trudeau. It’s every minister that’s been calling the shots. It’s every Liberal MP that looked down their nose at Canadians who are worried about high costs or crumbling health care. The Liberals do not deserve another chance, no matter who is the leader.”
— NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh
“There is no significant difference between the Liberal party that we know and the Liberal party that will be presented to us after there’s a new leader.”
— Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet
“President-elect Trump continues to make real threats about imposing sweeping tariffs that would devastate Canada’s economy. In two weeks, the president-elect will be sworn in as America’s next president and will have every opportunity to make his threats real. Between now and then, the federal government needs to do everything humanly possible to avoid these tariffs, including by doing more to secure our border and offering a credible plan to invest more in Canada’s military to meet and exceed our NATO spending commitments.”
— Ontario Premier Doug Ford
“As a lifelong Liberal I look forward to joining tens of thousands of Canadians to choose our next leader. This is the biggest opportunity in over a decade that we’ve had to grow our Party and welcome new Liberals — including Canadians concerned about the future of our country — let’s seize it!”
— Christy Clark, former B.C. premier
In his words
Trudeau’s full statement:
Every morning I’ve woken up as prime minister, I’ve been inspired by the resilience, the generosity and the determination of Canadians.
It is the driving force of every single day I have the privilege of serving in this office.
That is why, since 2015, I’ve fought for this country — for you — to strengthen and grow the middle class.
Why we rallied to support each other through the pandemic, to advance reconciliation, to defend free trade on this continent, to stand strong with Ukraine and our democracy, and to fight climate change and get our economy ready for the future.
We are at a critical moment in the world.
(Repeated in French)
My friends, as you all know, I’m a fighter.
Every bone in my body has always told me to fight because I care deeply about Canadians, I care deeply about this country and I will always be motivated by what is in the best interest of Canadians.
And the fact is, despite best efforts to work through it, Parliament has been paralyzed for months after what has been the longest session of a minority Parliament in Canadian history.
That’s why this morning I advised the Governor General that we need a new session of Parliament. She has granted this request and the House will now be prorogued until March 24th.
Over the holidays, I’ve also had a chance to reflect and have had long talks with my family about our future.
Throughout the course of my career, any success I have personally achieved has been because of their support and with their encouragement.
So last night, over dinner, I told my kids about the decision that I’m sharing with you today: I intend to resign as party leader, as prime minister after the party selects its next leader through a robust, nationwide, competitive process.
Last night, I asked the president of the Liberal party to begin that process.
This country deserves a real choice in the next election and it has become clear to me that if I’m having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best option in that election.
(Repeated in French)
The Liberal Party of Canada is an important institution in the history of our great country and democracy.
A new prime minister and leader of the Liberal party will carry its values and ideals into that next election.
I’m excited to see the process unfold in the months ahead.
We were elected for the third time in 2021 to strengthen the economy post-pandemic and advance Canada’s interests in a complicated world — and that is exactly the job that I, and we, will continue to do for Canadians.
Merci beaucoup, mes amis.