A vote of confidence in the Canadian government is expected to save Trudeau

There will likely be a vote of confidence in Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Wednesday. This is because Trudeau’s major political opponent didn’t seem to be able to get enough support to end nine years of Liberal Party rule.

The House of Commons is going to vote around 3:30 p.m. ET (19:30 GMT) on a move from the official opposition Conservative party that says they don’t trust Trudeau’s minority Liberal government.

Trudeau’s popularity has dropped because people are unhappy with rising prices and the housing problem. This month, the smaller New Democratic Party broke a deal that would have kept him in power until the 2025 election, making him more vulnerable in the political world.
When it comes to polls, the right-of-center Conservatives are way ahead. An election has to be called by the end of October 2025.

“This country makes me proud, and so do all Canadians.” Pierre Poilievre, the head of the Conservative Party, told the House on Tuesday that they were going to bring home the country they love.

People in the Conservative Party say they want an election as soon as possible because they think Canadians can’t afford the planned rise in the government carbon tax. They also say that crime and government spending have grown a lot under Trudeau.

Even though Trudeau agrees that people are unhappy, he says that the Conservatives are only interested in politics and not what people need.

To get rid of Trudeau, Poilievre needs the support of the two other big opposition parties in the House. However, both of them have made it clear that they will not work with him.

The separatist Bloc Quebecois wants Quebec to be its own country. They say they will support Trudeau in exchange for laws that increase benefits for seniors.

The NDP, like the Bloc and the Liberals, is a broadly center-left movement. It also says it will not vote to remove Trudeau, even though it broke the deal it had with him and caused his present problems. Polls show that the NDP would also have a hard time if there was an election now.

Trudeau played down polls that showed his party was disliked by saying that they only showed how unhappy Canadians are with everyday life.

“It makes sense that people are taking a lot out on me.” “People are sometimes looking at change,” he told U.S. late-night TV show Stephen Colbert on Monday. “I’ve been here, and I’ve been leading us through all of these things.”

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