The Trump-like Conservative leader is riding an anti-establishment wave—and will almost certainly become PM this year.
Pierre Poilievre, leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, is promising to eliminate the increase to the capital gains inclusion rate if elected.
The leader of Canada's Conservative party, Pierre Poilievre, has been leading in the polls and is favorite to become the country's next prime minister following the exit of Justin Trudeau.
The Conservative Party of Canada leader warned that Canada cannot afford “economically destructive, liberal taxes," as this would only drive more businesses away.
The leader of Canada’s Conservative Party, who has drawn comparisons to President-elect Donald Trump, was thrown into the global spotlight on Monday when Trudeau — his lefty rival
Pierre Poilievre's views on Bitcoin have sometimes attracted controversy, but a lot has changed over the past three years.
Pierre Poilievre’s recent 100-minute interview with controversial media commentator, Jordan Peterson, provided some clues about the Conservative leader’s political ideology.
Like Trump to the south, Poilievre believes energy — both renewable and fossil fuels — can create jobs and rescue the economy. But he also argues Canada’s abundance of oil is “underpriced’ and underulitilised in geopolitics because there is only one pipeline that does not head straight to the US.
Justin Trudeau's successor as Liberal leader and Canada's prime minister will soon face a bruising election against a sharp-tongued populist riding a wave of anti-Trudeau sentiment.
Like Jordan Peterson, whose recent interview with Poilievre has garnered 42 million views on X since it was posted Jan. 2 on YouTube, Poilievre is a native of Alberta, Canada’s most conservative province. Married since 2017 to his Venezuelan-born wife Anaida, he lives in in Ottawa, where the couple are raising their two young children.
Pierre Poilievre aims to become Canada's prime minister by leveraging Trump's rhetoric and positioning himself as a conservative alternative amid Trudeau's downfall.
Turn off the power I’m not fully sure how these tariffs work. I would assume that the importer of record has to pay the tariffs, so Americans would pay the extra amount for our products. While energy is a significant import into the U.