If Mark Carney wins the Liberal Party of Canada's leadership race, he would become prime minister without being a member of Parliament -- a situation some social media users claim would keep him from setting foot in the House of Commons.
Pro-Palestinian protesters and a significant endorsement of her rival for the Liberal Party leadership have marred former Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s campaign launch for the job of Canada’s next prime minister.
As a Toronto native studying at Northwestern, I have a unique perspective on the political landscapes of both the U.S. and Canada. In Canada, nearly a decade of governance under Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party of Canada has led to widespread frustrations over ballooning deficits,
The sprint to succeed Justin Trudeau as the leader of Canada’s Liberal Party has begun. Five candidates have entered the race ahead of the January 23rd deadline, but it will almost certainly be ...
Canada's ruling Liberal Party is looking for a new leader to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who announced on Jan. 6 he intended to step down.
The Trudeau government and regional leaders have put into place a retaliation strategy that's ready to go as leaders call for a national buy-Canadian response to President Donald Trump's tariff plans.
Rebuilding the Liberal party of Canada will be a key task for the party’s leadership race winner — and that message was a key element of Burlington member of Parliament Karina Gould’s leadership campaign launch. Gould announced her candidacy for leadership of the Liberal party of Canada at an event in Burlington on Sunday, Jan. 19.
The former governor of the Canadian and British central banks announced he was running to become head of the Liberal Party and prime minister.
Freeland is now running for both the next leader of the Liberal Party and prime minister of Canada. But as Freeland started her speech at a children's club in Toronto on Sunday, about a dozen ...
But the return of Donald Trump as president, whose actions on trade, technology and security threaten to shake up global affairs, is a reminder that history is also shaped by the agendas and personalities of leaders,
Harvard Salient President Sarah Steele and Harvard Salient board member Alfredo Ortiz tell Rachel Campos-Duffy about political bias experiences on the Ivy League institution's campus.