Canada’s Liberals closer to a majority government after another opposition defection

TORONTO (AP) — Another opposition lawmaker in Canada has defected to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s governing Liberals, all but assuring he will soon have a majority government.

Opposition New Democratic interim leader Don Davies said in a statement late Tuesday he was very disappointed Member of Parliament Lori ldlout has decided to join the Liberals.

That puts the Liberals closer to having a majority government and being able to pass any bill without opposition party support.

Liberal Cabinet minister Sean Fraser welcomed ldlout to the party in a social media post.

Three opposition Conservative members also defected to Carney’s Liberals in recent months.

With another lawmaker decamping from the leftist New Democratic party, the Liberals would have 170 Members of Parliament in the House of Commons. They need 172 to secure a majority government, which would allow them to unilaterally pass any bill.

A spokeswoman for Carney did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment. A message left at Idlout’s office was not immediately returned.

Carney has called special elections for three districts that would give the Liberals a majority government if his party wins two of them.

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            Carney calls special elections for three Canadian districts, which could lead to majority government
        

    

  

    

    
    








    

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The prime minister announced March 8 that votes will be cast April 13 in the Toronto-area districts of Scarborough Southwest and University-Rosedale, which are considered safe seats for the Liberals, and in the Montreal-area riding of Terrebonne, which is considered a toss up.

The three Conservative Members of Parliament who defected from their party to join the Liberals in recent months were Chris d’Entremont, Michael Ma and Matt Jeneroux.

Jeneroux referenced Carney’s speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos as helping his decision. In the speech, Carney condemned economic coercion by great powers against smaller countries and received widespread praise and attention for his remarks, upstaging U.S. President Donald Trump at the gathering.

Carney has moved the Liberals to the center since replacing Justin Trudeau as prime minister in 2025 and winning national elections.

“A year after becoming PM, Carney is an enduringly popular politician at home and, especially after his high-profile January 20 Davos speech, an increasingly prominent leader on the world stage,” said Daniel Béland, a political science professor at McGill University in Montreal.

“Mark Carney’s Liberals have found a way to attract both Conservative and NDP Members of Parliament to their caucus, a reality that points to the current political effectiveness of the Prime Minister’s centrist approach in a context of ongoing domestic anxieties over the economy and trade, including and especially with regard to Canada-US relations,” Béland said in an email.

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