Canada Opposition leader Poilievre wins seat, to take on Carney over tariffs

Mr. Jindal
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Canada’s federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre speaks to supporters next to his wife Anaida Poilievre after winning a by-election in Alberta’s Battle River-Crowfoot riding, after he lost his long-held Ottawa constituency in the general election, in Camrose, Alberta, Canada, August 18, 2025.

Canada’s federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre speaks to supporters next to his wife Anaida Poilievre after winning a by-election in Alberta’s Battle River-Crowfoot riding, after he lost his long-held Ottawa constituency in the general election, in Camrose, Alberta, Canada, August 18, 2025.
| Photo Credit: Reuters

The leader of Canada’s official Opposition Conservatives, Pierre Poilievre, secured a return to Parliament and a chance to grill Prime Minister Mark Carney, staging a comeback after unexpectedly losing his seat in an April election.

Mr. Poilievre won 80.4% of the vote in a special election on Monday (August 18, 2025) in the Parliamentary constituency of Battle River-Crowfoot in the province of Alberta, a Conservative stronghold.

The sitting legislator stepped down to allow Mr. Poilievre to run in his seat, thereby allowing him to return to the House of Commons.

Mr. Poilievre, who accuses the Liberal government of botching its handling of U.S. relations and running up out-of-control deficits, will be able to confront Mr. Carney when the House of Commons returns on September 15.

Mr. Carney, who took over as Prime Minister in March, secured a strong minority government in April’s federal election on a promise to stand up to U.S. President Donald Trump. He has since moderated his approach even as Washington imposed more tariffs.

“The deficit is spiraling out of control, inflation is up, elbows are down,” Mr. Poilievre told a victory rally. Mr. Carney offered his congratulations in a post on X.

Mr. Carney is in no immediate danger politically. Although the Liberals have a minority, they should be able to rely on the support of smaller parties to survive confidence votes.

A Nanos Research poll earlier this month put the Liberals at 44% popular support compared with 33% for the Conservatives.

Mr. Carney has pulled the Liberals more to the center and Mr. Poilievre will find it harder to draw a sharp contrast, said pollster Nik Nanos, CEO of Nanos Research.

“Poilievre needs to articulate what he learned from the last federal election and how his government would be different than a Carney government,” he said via email.

At the start of the year the Conservatives looked set for a crushing election victory over the Liberals of then-Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who were far behind in polls after more than nine years in power.

But Liberal fortunes soared after Mr. Trudeau announced he was stepping down and Mr. Trump began threatening Canada with tariffs and annexation.

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