Tuesday, January 27, 2026
ADVT 
National

Carney, Poilievre take their campaigns to the GTA today

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2025 12:14 PM
  • Carney, Poilievre take their campaigns to the GTA today

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre is promising to make it easier for cities to cut the cost of building new homes.

The Conservative plan would see the federal government reimburse cities for half of every dollar they cut in development charges, up to a maximum of $25,000 per home.

The party says that would result in a maximum of $50,000 in savings for the companies that pay the development charges, which help to fund new infrastructure for housing, like roads and sewers.

A Conservative backgrounder document did not specify whether there would be a mechanism to force developers topass on those savings to homebuyers.

Asked how the party knows that developers would pass on the full savings to homebuyers, a Conservative spokesperson pointed to a portion of the document that says cities would be "required to publicly report their development charges and explain how the savings and federal funds will be used."

The Liberals and Conservatives are both campaigning in theGreater Toronto Area today.

Liberal Leader Mark Carney is set to make an announcement in Brampton, Ont., in the morning and meet with supporters and volunteers in Hamilton, Ont., in the afternoon.

Poilievre will follow his morning press conference in Milton, Ont., with a rally in Woolwich, Ont., in the evening.

As of 2021, the population of the Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area was over seven million — almost 20 per cent of Canada's population.

A new Leger poll, which was conducted online and can't be assigned a margin of error, suggests that 48 per cent of Ontarians will vote Liberal in the election, while 39 per cent will vote Conservative and nine per cent will vote NDP.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh will be in Saskatoon today, where he will make an announcement and meet with the Federation of Sovereign Indigenous Nations.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published April 10, 2025.

MORE National ARTICLES

Explainer: What's a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?

Explainer: What's a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?
Stock markets are plunging, consumers and businesses have started to sour on the economy, and economists are marking down their estimates for growth this year, with some even seeing rising odds of a recession. The tech-heavy Nasdaq stock index slipped into a correction last week, defined as a 10% drop from its most recent peak. The broader S&P 500 neared that level Tuesday.

Explainer: What's a recession and why is rising anxiety about it roiling markets?

Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat

Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat
Trump says he will double the steel and aluminum tariffs he promised to deploy on Canadian products tomorrow — to 50 per cent — in response to Ontario's 25 per cent surcharge on electricity exports to the U.S. Trump originally vowed to impose 25 per cent tariffs on all steel and aluminum imports.

Poilievre wants to impose 50 per cent metal tariffs on U.S. after latest Trump threat

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now
The trade war between the U.S. and Canada took another turn Tuesday as U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to double the tariff on steel and aluminum imports coming from Canada in response to Ontario's surcharge on electricity exports. Trump said 50 per cent tariffs will be placed on Canadian steel and aluminum starting Wednesday, up from the 25 per cent tariffs that had been expected to apply to those materials.

Confused about tariff deadlines? Here's what we know right now

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs
Prime minister-designate Mark Carney says he will keep Canadian retaliatory tariffs in place until "Americans show us respect" and commit to free trade again. Carney is reacting after U.S. President Donald Trump moved today to double incoming tariffs on Canadian steel and aluminum, which Carney calls an attack on Canadian workers and businesses.

PM-designate Carney demands respect from U.S. as Trump doubles tariffs

Doctors thrust into COVID-19 celebrity reflect on backlash, threats and Thank You letters

Doctors thrust into COVID-19 celebrity reflect on backlash, threats and Thank You letters
Doctors who were thrust into national fame when COVID-19 hit five years ago say they try to focus on positive feedback from the public rather than the angry backlash and threats of violence they faced. British Columbia public health chief Dr. Bonnie Henry still has a security detail to this day because of threats against her and her family from people angry about lockdowns or opposed to COVID vaccination. 

Doctors thrust into COVID-19 celebrity reflect on backlash, threats and Thank You letters

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax
Mark Carney's victory in the Liberal leadership race puts the final nail in the coffin of Ottawa's controversial plan to hike the inclusion rate on capital gains. When they tabled their budget last spring, the federal Liberals presented the plan to change capital gains as a way to get wealthy Canadians and corporations to pay more — but the plan has faced a series of delays ever since.

Carney's win kills Liberals' much-delayed plan to change capital gains tax