Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

François-Philippe Champagne to announce Tuesday if he's running for leader

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Jan, 2025 01:41 PM
  • François-Philippe Champagne to announce Tuesday if he's running for leader

Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne plans to reveal Tuesday whether he will run in the upcoming party leadership race to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Champagne is expected to share his decision during a talk at the Canadian Club in Toronto hosted by business journalist Amanda Lang, a source close to the minister said Monday.

That event, scheduled for 12:40 p.m., is being billed as a conversation about artificial intelligence, economic security, supply chains and critical minerals against the backdrop of the incoming Donald Trump administration in the U.S.

Other Liberals considering launching their own leadership bids are now making public appeals for support.

Seven prospective leadership candidates now have forms posted on the Liberal party website to collect the signatures they require to enter the race.

Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland, former central banker Mark Carney and former B.C. premier Christy Clark each have their forms up on the site, along with cabinet ministers Karina Gould and Jonathan Wilkinson, Liberal MP Chandra Arya and former MP Frank Baylis.

While Champagne has long been floated in media reports as a potential leadership contender, he appears to have no publicly available page on the party website seeking signatures.

To launch a leadership run, each candidate must collect 300 signatures from registered Liberals, including at least 100 from three different provinces or territories.

Transport Minister Anita Anand and Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon bowed out of the race over the weekend, while Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly and Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc announced last week they would not run.

They dropped out shortly after the party announced the tight timeline and a steep entrance fee of $350,000.

MacKinnon said in a social media post on Sunday that he wanted to enter to ensure strong bilingual representation, but the "time available does not allow me to mount the kind of campaign that I would want to run." 

The vote will be held on March 9 and candidates have to declare their intention to run by Jan. 23. They also face a fast-approaching cutoff date of Jan. 27 to sign up members eligible to vote in the race.

"There are time constraints, no doubt about it," Liberal MP Yasir Naqvi told reporters in Ottawa Monday, noting a federal election will follow closely after the new leader is chosen. "It's important we have a strong leader in place as quickly as possible."

Trudeau's office confirmed the outgoing prime minister will refrain from weighing in during the race and will remain neutral.

The party's leadership vote committee, led by former party president Suzanne Cowan and the party's Quebec director Marc-Etienne Vien, is drafting the rules and procedures for the vote, while the leadership expense committee is working on setting the spending rules and limits.

Party president Sachit Mehra announced over the weekend that the committee has tapped Beatrice Keleher Raffoul to serve as the chief electoral officer for the vote.

MORE National ARTICLES

All premiers aligned on push for Canada to have bilateral trade deal with U.S.: Ford

All premiers aligned on push for Canada to have bilateral trade deal with U.S.: Ford
All 13 provincial and territorial premiers are aligned on a push for the federal government to negotiate a bilateral trade deal with the United States, Ontario Premier Doug Ford said Wednesday. Ford, who is the current chair of the Council of the Federation, the group of Canada's 13 premiers, said they had a call and there is a clear consensus that the country needs separate agreements with the U.S. and Mexico.

All premiers aligned on push for Canada to have bilateral trade deal with U.S.: Ford

Arrest made in homicide: VPD

Arrest made in homicide: VPD
Police in Vancouver say they have made an arrest in the stabbing death of a 34-year-old man in the city's Downtown Eastside a year ago. They say Stephen Crock was found on the sidewalk near East Hastings and Columbia suffering from stab wounds on November 21st, 2023.

Arrest made in homicide: VPD

Lineup released for the Invictus Games

Lineup released for the Invictus Games
Vancouver Whistler Games Corporation has announced the lineup for the closing ceremonies of the 2025 Invictus Games. The closing ceremony, which will take place at Rogers Arena on February 16th, will include Nashville country singer Jelly Roll, Canadian rock band Barenaked Ladies, and Americana music duo The War And Treaty.

Lineup released for the Invictus Games

Avian flu at 2 farms in Abbotsford

Avian flu at 2 farms in Abbotsford
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says it has detected the presence of highly pathogenic avian influenza at two more commercial poultry farms in Abbotsford.  The agency currently lists 43 premises in B-C where the flu has been detected in bird flocks.

Avian flu at 2 farms in Abbotsford

Emergency alert test coming as B.C. mops up from 'bomb cyclone' with high winds

Emergency alert test coming as B.C. mops up from 'bomb cyclone' with high winds
A test for Canada's emergency alert system is set to take place just as British Columbia cleans up from a so-called "bomb cyclone" weather system that cut power and battered parts of the coast with hurricane-force winds. The national alert system is typically tested twice a year, with the next test set to take place today at 1:55 p.m. Pacific time.

Emergency alert test coming as B.C. mops up from 'bomb cyclone' with high winds

B.C. port union challenges constitutionality of labour minister's back-to-work order

B.C. port union challenges constitutionality of labour minister's back-to-work order
The union representing port supervisors in British Columbia is formally challenging the legal and constitutional authority of the federal labour minister to order them back to work. In a legal document dated Tuesday, International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514 says it's questioning whether the order issued by Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon last week violates the right to collective bargaining and the right to strike.

B.C. port union challenges constitutionality of labour minister's back-to-work order