Monday, March 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Has Won The Most Seats — But Not A Majority. What Happens Next?

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2019 06:47 PM

    OTTAWA - The Liberals have once more won the most seats in the House of Commons, but this time they do not have an outright majority. So what happens next?

     

    With fewer than the 170 seats needed to command the House on their own, Justin Trudeau will need the support of at least one other party to pass legislation in Parliament — and survive a confidence vote on a speech from the throne laying out his plans for governing.

     

     

    Before then, Trudeau will have to deal with some of the implications of Monday's results.

     

    Trudeau is still the prime minister and Canada is technically still in the same "ministry" — essentially, the same cabinet or administration — as before the election.

     

     

    However, the first decision Trudeau makes will likely be to reshuffle his cabinet, considering Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale and Natural Resources Minister Amarjeet Sohi lost their seats.

     

    Trudeau's next decisions will be to set a time for Parliament to reconvene. Technically, the Governor General summons a new Parliament, but does so on the advice of the prime minister.

     

    The timing of reconvening the House has varied throughout Canadian history. In 2015, it took over a month for MPs to be called back to Ottawa, though a new cabinet was sworn in far earlier than that. Given that there is less dramatic change than in that year, it's possible we may see Parliament return sooner.

     

    When the new Parliament sits, its very first order of business will be the election of a Speaker. Geoff Regan, the current Speaker, was re-elected to his Halifax-area seat Monday but isn't automatically returned to the position.

     

    The longest-serving MP in the House will preside over that election. Louis Plamondon, a Bloc MP, will oversee the proceedings for the fourth time — Plamondon has held his Quebec seat since 1984 and was comfortably re-elected.

     

    And it's after the election of the Speaker that the main event begins, with a speech from the throne. In the speech, the government will lay out its priorities and hint at what direction it will take in the new Parliament.

     

    The speech from the throne is also the first opportunity for opposition parties to try to bring down the government in a confidence challenge. Since the Liberals have less than a majority of seats, they will need to make sure they can secure at least 170 votes to keep the confidence of the House and their grip on power.

     

    Trudeau has a few options. For one, he might bet that no party will want to bring down the government and potentially force another election — or otherwise give the Conservatives the opportunity to form government.

     

    In that case, Trudeau would not make any agreements with the opposition parties, bet that he would survive a potential confidence vote anyway, and from there see if he could secure support on an issue-to-issue basis.

     

    But if he wants a more stable situation, Trudeau could make a more formal deal with another party to secure its support on confidence matters, an arrangement dubbed a "confidence and supply" agreement.

     

    Such an deal is in place in British Columbia, where the NDP are in government and maintain a parliamentary majority thanks to support from the provincial Greens.

     

    At the federal level, the most likely partner for such an agreement would be the NDP under Jagmeet Singh. During the campaign, Singh laid out six priorities for supporting another party in a minority, including pharmacare, investments in housing and action on climate change.

     

    In exchange for maintaining the minority government, the NDP would expect to influence government policy on these files.

     

    It's possible that the Liberals could form a formal coalition with another party — in which members of the other party serve in cabinet — to maintain a majority, though this is unlikely.

     

    The Bloc also has enough seats to sustain a Liberal government if it chooses to do so.

     

    However they get there, the goal of the Liberals will be to make sure they have at least 170 votes for confidence challenges and pieces of major legislation.

     

    Whether Trudeau wants to cut a deal with another party or take it vote by vote is up to him.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mayor In B.C. Home Town Of Murder Suspects Says The Tragedy Has Spread Worldwide

    PORT ALBERNI, B.C. - The mayor of a Vancouver Island town that was home for two deceased murder suspects expressed her sorrow Thursday for the nationwide tragedy that resulted in five deaths.

    Mayor In B.C. Home Town Of Murder Suspects Says The Tragedy Has Spread Worldwide

    Canada Raises Travel Warning Amid Escalating Protests In Hong Kong

    Canada Raises Travel Warning Amid Escalating Protests In Hong Kong
    OTTAWA - The federal government has issued a travel advisory that urges Canadians travelling to Hong Kong to exercise "a high degree of caution" because of the escalating protests in the city.    

    Canada Raises Travel Warning Amid Escalating Protests In Hong Kong

    Court Urges New Laws To Assign Liability For Victims Of Cyberfraud

    Court Urges New Laws To Assign Liability For Victims Of Cyberfraud
    TORONTO - A deputy judge is calling for passage of clear laws on which innocent party should bear responsibility for financial losses related to cyberfraud.    

    Court Urges New Laws To Assign Liability For Victims Of Cyberfraud

    Man Filmed Committing 'Hateful Act' Against Mother Identified By Montreal Police

    Montreal police say they have identified a man seen in a widely shared video verbally harassing a woman and a crying child.

    Man Filmed Committing 'Hateful Act' Against Mother Identified By Montreal Police

    Retired Senior Mountie Says Answers Could Still Come In B.C. Homicides

    The manhunt for Kam McLeod, 19, and Bryer Schmegelsky, 18, from Port Alberni, B.C., ended Wednesday when two bodies were found in dense brush in northern Manitoba.    

    Retired Senior Mountie Says Answers Could Still Come In B.C. Homicides

    Canadian Wage Growth Hits Fastest Pace Since 2009, But Economy Sheds Jobs

    Canadian Wage Growth Hits Fastest Pace Since 2009, But Economy Sheds Jobs
    OTTAWA - Wage growth accelerated last month to its fastest clip in more than decade, according to numbers released Friday from Statistics Canada.

    Canadian Wage Growth Hits Fastest Pace Since 2009, But Economy Sheds Jobs