Tuesday, January 13, 2026
ADVT 
National

Mark Carney set to launch Liberal leadership bid Thursday in Edmonton

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Jan, 2025 11:16 AM
  • Mark Carney set to launch Liberal leadership bid Thursday in Edmonton

Former central banker Mark Carney will launch his bid to lead the Liberal party in Edmonton on Thursday, says a news release from Calgary Liberal MP George Chahal.

In a note to supporters inviting them to attend the event, Chahal describes Carney as "not a career politician."

"In an era of global challenges, in a time of economic opportunity, Mark Carney has the experience required and the leadership skills needed to meet those challenges and take advantage of the opportunities," Chahal's email said.

Candidates only have about a week left to declare that they will run.

Former finance minister Chrystia Freeland and current cabinet minister Karina Gould are also expected to launch their leadership bids in the coming days.

Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne, Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly and Finance Minister Dominic LeBlanc have all ruled out running to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

The next Liberal leader will need to turn their attention quickly to ensuring the party is ready for an early election once the short leadership race ends in March.

The Liberals say they have 129 candidates nominated out of 343 federal ridings, while the Conservatives say they have close to 221 and the New Democrats say they have 93.

The Liberals currently have 153 MPs in the House of Commons but many high-profile caucus members have said they will not seek re-election - including Transport Minister Anita Anand, Marie-Claude Bibeau, Seamus O'Regan and Dan Vandal.

University of Toronto political science professor Randy Besco said the next Liberal leader will need to quickly sort out their campaign machinery, since senior members of Trudeau's office may be unwilling to stick it out under a new leader.

"There's not that many people who are qualified to run a national campaign. There's like 10 or 20 in the whole country. It's really quite small, actually, compared to say the United States or elsewhere," he said. 

"Putting all that infrastructure together and the people and the organization, if it's true that we're going to have a new leader and then immediately an election, that's going be a big challenge (for the party)."

He said the Liberals won't have a hard time finding candidates but likely will struggle to attract star talent, given the Conservatives' solid double-digit lead in the polls.

Candidates who are nominated late in the game won't have spent much time knocking on doors and fundraising before the election campaign begins, Besco said.

"That's also going be a problem for them."

MORE National ARTICLES

Wild Christmas: BC Ferries cancels many sailings over 'severe' forecast

Wild Christmas: BC Ferries cancels many sailings over 'severe' forecast
The ferry firm said the "severe" forecast meant all sailings between Tsawwassen and Duke Point in Nanaimo on Wednesday had to be axed, while trips between Tsawwassen and Swartz Bay between 11 a.m. and 5 p.m. were also scrapped.

Wild Christmas: BC Ferries cancels many sailings over 'severe' forecast

Fake banker scam in Burnaby

Fake banker scam in Burnaby
Mounties in Burnaby are asking for the public's help identifying a suspect believed to have defrauded a senior of thousands of dollars by posing as a bank employee. Police say they received a report in September saying a man called the victim and was able to obtain their date of birth and passwords.

Fake banker scam in Burnaby

Premiers urge Trudeau to extend deadline for charitable donations after postal strike

Premiers urge Trudeau to extend deadline for charitable donations after postal strike
Canada's premiers are calling on the federal government to extend the deadline for claiming charitable donations on tax returns through to the end of February. Ontario Premier Doug Ford made the request in a letter to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday, sent in his capacity as chair of the Council of the Federation.

Premiers urge Trudeau to extend deadline for charitable donations after postal strike

Man dead after Mounties attempt arrest

Man dead after Mounties attempt arrest
RCMP say a man died after officers tried to arrest him on outstanding warrants near Edmonton. Police were called Monday to a rural home southeast of the city in Beaver County.

Man dead after Mounties attempt arrest

Arrest after man drives wrong way

Arrest after man drives wrong way
Mounties are looking for witnesses and dashcam footage of a pickup truck that crossed onto the wrong side of Highway 1 when police tried to pull it over near Hope, B.C., last week. They say that just before 9:30 a.m. on Dec. 17, BC Highway Patrol attempted to stop a white pickup truck that was speeding in the eastbound lane of the highway.

Arrest after man drives wrong way

Israeli expert seeks new crime against humanity for waging violence against families

Israeli expert seeks new crime against humanity for waging violence against families
The Israeli expert leading a civilian commission into sexual violence by Hamas is calling for global bodies to recognize "a new crime against humanity" involving violence targeted at families. Cochav Elkayam-Levy said the world should take a stance against the destruction of families as a specific, identifiable weapon of war, aimed at terrorizing one's kin. She is proposing the crime be called "kinocide."

Israeli expert seeks new crime against humanity for waging violence against families