World | Canada Canada's Next PM Could Be Its Shortest-Serving Liberal Party will name new leader on March 9 By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Jan 10, 2025 10:39 AM CST Copied Former Governor of the Bank of Canada and Bank of England Mark Carney speaks during the Canada 2020 Net-Zero Leadership Summit in Ottawa on Wednesday, April 19, 2023. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press via AP, File) Canada's governing Liberal Party will announce the country's next prime minister on March 9 after a leadership vote that follows the resignation of Justin Trudeau this week, party leaders said late Thursday. Trudeau remains prime minister until a new leader is chosen. The frontrunners for the Liberal leadership are former central banker Mark Carney and ex-Finance Minster Chrystia Freeland, whose abrupt resignation last month hastened Trudeau's exit. Sachit Mehra, president of the Liberal Party of Canada, said the party will "be ready to fight and win the 2025 election" after choosing a new leader. But the next Liberal leader could be the shortest-tenured prime minister in the country's history, the AP reports. All three opposition parties have vowed to bring down the Liberals' minority government in a no-confidence vote to trigger an election after Parliament resumes on March 24. Under Canadian law, the election or campaign period must be at least 37 days and no more than 51 days. The record for the shortest-serving Canadian prime minister in history is currently held by Sir Charles Tupper, who was PM for just 68 days in 1896. Sources tell the CBC that Trudeau sought to buy his party more time by asking the leaders of the NDP and Bloc Quebecois parties to support the Liberals in a March 26 budget vote, but they refused. Recent polls suggest the Liberals' chances of winning the next election look slim. In the latest poll by Nanos, the Liberals trail the opposition Conservatives 45% to 23%. A separate Ipsos poll found that 81% of Canadians, including 70% of Liberal supporters, approve of Trudeau's decision to resign, Global News reports. Read These Next Golden Globes ends with an upset. Fed's Jerome Powell usually holds his fire. But no more. Nikki Glaser jokes about Epstein files at the Golden Globes. Kelly will fight Pentagon in court over Hegseth move. Report an error