Wednesday, December 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Liberals turn to transition plans after Mark Carney wins leadership

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Mar, 2025 09:50 AM
  • Liberals turn to transition plans after Mark Carney wins leadership

Liberal MPs are gathering on Parliament Hill this afternoon to huddle after the party chose former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney as its new leader.

Carney is heading into a day full of briefings and in the coming days will need to be sworn in as prime minister, choose his cabinet and sort out his party's battle plans for the coming federal election — but the exact timeline for all these things remains unclear.

An early election call is widely expected within days or weeks of Carney being installed as prime minister, as the Liberal party looks to take advantage of the polling momentum it has enjoyed in recent weeks.

Like Justin Trudeau before him and even Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, Carney won a resounding mandate from the party base — ultimately capturing 86 per cent of the vote.

Carney's main rival Chrystia Freeland came in a distant second and said after the event that she always knew it would be an uphill battle, since the party establishment rallied around Carney's candidacy.

A breakdown of the leadership vote results released by the Liberal party shows that Carney beat his rivals in their own ridings — by wide margins.

Freeland won 188 votes in her riding of University—Rosedale — Carney netted 1,322 votes there — while Gould won 190 votes to Carney's 818 in her Burlington riding.

Frank Baylis, who came in fourth, came the closest to Carney on his home turf, taking 130 votes in his former riding of Pierrefonds—Dollard to Carney's 247.

Carney swept every single riding across the country through the points-based system, taking in a total of 29,456 points. Each riding was worth 100 points and Carney scored higher than 60 points in each one.

A big part of Freeland's strategy throughout the race was to reach out to Liberal members in rural ridings not currently held by the Liberal party. The strategy failed; she won only 2,728 points.

Freeland's highest individual point score for an electoral district was the 25 points she took in the rural Quebec riding of Côte-Nord—Kawawachikamach — Nitassinan, currently held by the Bloc Québécois.

Carney led in caucus and cabinet endorsements throughout the race, but many Liberals also endorsed Freeland — including Justice Minister Arif Virani, Health Minister Mark Holland and Fisheries Minister Diane Lebouthillier, and MPs such as Ben Carr, Anthony Housefather and Marie-Claude Bibeau.

The Conservatives slammed the result as a coronation and Poilievre called it a "sneaky" move for the Liberals to swap Trudeau with Carney in an attempt to win a fourth mandate.

MORE National ARTICLES

Chilly temperatures to hang on in southern B.C., forecaster says

Chilly temperatures to hang on in southern B.C., forecaster says
Winter's grip on southern British Columbia may hang on as a few flurries remain in the forecast for parts of Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley.  Meteorologist Derek Lee with Environment Canada says anotherlow-pressure system could bring flurries for Saturday and Sunday, but it won't be widespread, and will likely fall in Eastern Metro Vancouver and the Fraser Valley. 

Chilly temperatures to hang on in southern B.C., forecaster says

Armed man arrested in Vancouver after barricading himself in taxi

Armed man arrested in Vancouver after barricading himself in taxi
Vancouver Police say more than 25 officers and its K9 unit were deployed in the city's downtown Thursday night to arrest an armed suspect who was wanted Canada-wide on parole violations. They say that a police sergeant was on patrolling around 7 p.m. when a witness flagged him over to report a man with a gun entering a building near Seymour and Nelson streets.

Armed man arrested in Vancouver after barricading himself in taxi

Police ask for help in probe of B.C. woman's death in fall from a truck

Police ask for help in probe of B.C. woman's death in fall from a truck
The RCMP's major crime unit is asking for the public's help in investigating the death of a woman almost a month ago in Trail. Police say 38-year-old Laura Morrison was the front passenger in a 2023 white Ford F-150 late on Jan. 9 when she reportedly fell from the moving vehicle.

Police ask for help in probe of B.C. woman's death in fall from a truck

Trump's choice for chief trade negotiator says tariff threat is about fentanyl

Trump's choice for chief trade negotiator says tariff threat is about fentanyl
Jamieson Greer, Trump's choice for U.S. trade representative, told his Senate confirmation hearing that America doesn't want to see another fentanyl death. He said the president would be acting within his powers if he imposed steep duties on Canadian imports.

Trump's choice for chief trade negotiator says tariff threat is about fentanyl

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking
A "significant portion" of opioids prescribed by doctors and pharmacists in British Columbia are being diverted, and prescribed alternatives are being trafficked provincially, nationally and internationally, a Ministry of Health investigative unit says.

B.C. investigates 'significant' opioid diversion, including international trafficking

MPs reject Trump's idea of clearing out Gaza as Israeli minister points to Canada

MPs reject Trump's idea of clearing out Gaza as Israeli minister points to Canada
Canadian politicians are pushing back on the idea of clearing Palestinians out of the Gaza Strip as an Israeli minister suggests some of them could be sent to Canada. The previous day, U.S. President Donald Trump stunned leaders across the Middle East and beyond when he suggested that the territory be cleared out and made into a U.S.-owned resort destination.

MPs reject Trump's idea of clearing out Gaza as Israeli minister points to Canada