Reminder: November 11th - Rememberance Day is not about celebrating Wars and the soldiers who fought them. Itâs about remembering tragic world events that have affected us all on a generational level. Itâs about remembering every awful thing that happened and how we stood up to each other to bring ourselves into what we believed at the time was freedom. Freedom of the people, freedom of our country, freedom of fear and fighting.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
The Trumpiest politician in the history of our northern neighbor was on a glide path to the prime ministership. Then the president opened hi
Taylor Noakes at TNR:
Though it has been something of a slow-burn news story on the American side of the worldâs longest undefended border, President Donald Trumpâs constant threats of annexation, along with his chaotic and unnecessary trade war, have accomplished something he probably never intended: Heâs managed to unite Canada in a way few thought possible. What Trump doesnât appear to realize is that doing so has also cost him, if not an ally, then at least a like-minded collaborator.
It is perhaps the ultimate demonstration of Trumpâs unmitigated ignorance that he may have ruined the prospects of the most Trumpian politician in Canadian history. Trumpâs unjustified and inexcusable attack on Canadaâs sovereignty has reversed the very political trends that have developed in Canada over the last several years that might have been to his advantage. Trump has united Canada against not only him but perhaps the United States as a whole, for generations to come.
The future of Canada didnât look very promising throughout 2024. The federal government appeared weak and ineffectual while certain provincial premiers routinely challenged federal authority in key areas of jurisdiction. A general affordability crisis worsened as inflation grew and the value of the Canadian dollar fell to lows not seen in decades. Battered by decades of chronic underfunding, Canadaâs health care system seemed on the verge of collapse.
Calls for former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to resign grew with intensity throughout the year, while polling suggested his chief rival, Conservative Party of Canada leader Pierre Poilievre, would easily win the election scheduled for 2025Â with a commanding majority. Poilievre was far from a unifying voice in Canadian politics; he opted instead for exceptionally divisive rhetoric designed to appeal to his die-hard supporters first and foremost.
Among Poilievreâs preferred rhetorical devices was his assertion that âCanada is broken.â
Much like Trump, Poilievre often seemed to be the one doing the breaking, and offering little more than catchphrases as a stand-in for real policy. Poilievre is unnecessarily combative and hostile with Canadian journalists, despite Canadian news mediaâs conservative bias. He has repeatedly called for defunding the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, or CBCâCanadaâs national public broadcaster and a cornerstone of Canadian cultural identityâcalling it a propaganda arm of the Liberal Party of Canada (sound familiar?), despite the fact that studies of CBC News coverage show it tends to benefit Canadaâs conservatives.
Poilievre was also a major opponent of Canadaâs generally successful Covid-19 pandemic response, and has unsuccessfully promoted legislation to oppose vaccine mandates for federal workers and the traveling public. More significantly, Poilievre was a visible supporter of the so-called Freedom Convoy of early 2022, a national protest movement against pandemic containment measures that ultimately evolved into a prolonged occupation of parts of downtown Ottawa, and which was arguably inspired by the January 6 riot.
It was his support of this protest in particular that is credited with having given Poilievre an edge in the 2022 Conservative Party leadership contest over his more centrist rival. Poilievre has also received many of the same far-right endorsements as Trump, including those of Elon Musk, Jordan Peterson, Conrad Black, and Ben Shapiro. If Trump wanted Canada to be the fifty-first state, Poilievre might have made an excellent collaborationist governor. But, as Frank Sinatra once sang,âThen I go and spoil it all by saying something stupid.â
Trudeau finally capitulated to abysmal polling numbers and the very real threat that his Liberal Party might be wiped out in the 2025 election by announcing his resignation on January 6, 2025. Poilievreâs ascendancy to the prime ministership, with a majority government no less (guaranteeing him a minimum four-year term), seemed certain.
Then Donald Trump started talking about annexation, slapped tariffs on Canadian exports, and started a trade war, falsely claiming that fentanyl was coming into the United States through Canada, and that the U.S. was âsubsidizingâ Canada to the tune of $200 billion per year. The reality is actually the opposite: Less than 1 percent of all fentanyl entering the U.S. comes from Canada, and there are at least three different ways in which Canada subsidizes the U.S., including via secure, low-cost energy exports.
[...]
Far more significant is the reversal of Poilievreâs once sky-high fortunes. Having built much of his political identity as an âanti-Trudeau,â antiestablishment faux populist, in the same vein as Trump and his ilk, Poilievre now finds himself both without a nemesis on which to blame all of Canadaâs problems and appearing too closeâin ideology as much as personalityâto the number one enemy of the Canadian public. Recent polling suggests that not only has Poilievre lost his once formidable leadin the race to become Canadaâs next prime minister but that Trudeauâs successorâthe economist Mark Carneyâmay even lead the governing Liberal Party back to a parliamentary majority for the first time in six years.
Put another way, if this occurs, it would be the single most startling reversal in Canadian political history, by a considerable margin.
The ascendancy of Poilievre was all but guaranteed when Trudeau announced his resignation in early January. Had Trump not threatened Canada with tariffs, and instead simply waited for the federal election, he may very well have been negotiating with Poilievre.
And despite Poilievreâs more than 20 years serving as a parliamentarianâwhich has included stints as a junior Cabinet minister and his more recent foray into the leadership of Canadaâs right-wing Conservative Partyâhe remains something of a political neophyte. Elected fresh out of college, Poilievre is the epitome of a career politician but otherwise has no career, nor profession to speak of. Moreover, a key Poilievre allyâJamil Jivaniâis close friends with Vice President JD Vance. Where this may have once been mentioned as a potential strength of an incoming Poilievre administrationâa direct and personal connection to the White Houseâit is now seen as a major liability as Poilievre tries to rebrand himself as a patriot.
Though it isnât really helping, Trump has further insulted Poilievre by saying heâs ânot a MAGA guy.â However much Poilievre may be trying to live up to Trumpâs statement, itâs abundantly obvious in Canada that Poilievre is being dragged down by the same âMaple MAGAâ movementthat convinced Trudeau to resign and brought Poilievre so close to the halls of power in the first place.
Itâs still not clear when Canadians will go to the polls to choose their next government (it could happen any time between late April and late October). Still, Mark Carney has momentum few observers ever would have imagined for an economist with no prior political experience. Carneyâs experience running the Bank of Canada and the Bank of England is likely to appeal to a broad swath of Canadian voters. He has taken credit for steering Canada through the worst of the 2008 financial crisis and for keeping Great Britain afloat during Brexit. There are few people with his set of skills and professional experience, and itâs looking like this will be an easy choice come election time.
If the results of the Liberal Party leadership race are any indication, Carney may secure a majority government for his party, demolish Poilievre, and perhaps even take down the personality cult that is Poilievreâs Conservative Party (Carney won on the first ballot, virtually unheard of, with 86 percent of the vote).
Though Carney is unlikely to feign progressive ideals, as Trudeau did to get elected a decade ago, Canadian progressives may see in him something better than simply the lesser evil. A Carney majority government would likely present a formidable challenge to Trump while simultaneously bringing about a sea change in Canadian politics. If current polling is accurate, not only will Carney vanquish Poilievre and his increasingly far-right Conservative Party, but he may also prove fatal to Canadaâs traditional progressive party, the New Democratic Party, or NDP, including the potential loss of official party status. This may ultimately result in Canadaâs conservatives moving back toward the center and encourage the NDP to move further left (Canadian progressives have blamed the partyâs centrist slide for its poor performance in the last several federal elections).
This notwithstanding, a Carney victory would be an unambiguous message from the Canadian public that Trump must be opposed at all costs and therefore that the vulnerabilities of continental interconnectedness should be corrected as quickly as possible. If this means transitioning away from economic integration with the U.S., who better than Carney to manage such a transition? This may appeal to some Canadian progressives who recognize free trade with the U.S. as a foundational problem that has eroded Canadian political and economic sovereignty, as much as its social safety net and culture, for more than a generation.
Though Carney is an exceptionally well-connected establishment figure with a decidedly neoliberal track record, Trumpâs existential threat to Canada may necessitate a broad national effort to economic independence and self-sufficiency thatâs incompatible with neoliberalism. Canadians seem eager to fight back as much as imagine a new, better, and perhaps more autonomous and independent future. They may end up with a shift in the status quo that doesnât involve cozying up to the madman in the White House.
Donald Trumpâs bullying of Canada managed to unite Canada together⌠against him, regardless of political leaning or language spoken.
The Liberal Party of Canada and its new PM, Mark Carney, is reaping the benefits at the polls.
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming