Immigration minister calls efforts to oust Trudeau 'garbage' - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:13 AM | Calgary | -12.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Immigration minister calls efforts to oust Trudeau 'garbage'

Immigration Minister Marc Miller todaycalled efforts by disaffected Liberal MPs tooust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau"garbage"and said it would be better for the team to pull together to take on their main opponent: Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.

'Any minute spent on this garbage is a minute that's not spent on Pierre Poilievre,' Marc Miller says

Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller takes questions from reporters as the Liberal caucus meets on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024.
Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Marc Miller takes questions from reporters as the Liberal caucus meets on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Wednesday, Oct. 9, 2024. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

Immigration Minister Marc Miller todaycalled efforts by disaffected Liberal MPs tooust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau"garbage"and said it would be better for the team to pull together to take on their main opponent: Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre.

"Any minute spent on this garbage is a minute that's not spent on Pierre Poilievre and what he wants to do to this country, and I think that is very dangerous," Miller told reportersahead of a cabinet meeting.

Miller, who is a close personal friend of Trudeau, also said the MPs planning a caucus revolt should come out of the shadows and tell the prime minister in person that they want him gone.

"I think they have to express themselves to his face," he said. "I think you will see the vast majority of caucus and cabinet the entirety of cabinet is behind him."

WATCH:Immigration minister calls efforts to oust Trudeau 'garbage'

Immigration minister calls efforts to oust Trudeau garbage

4 days ago
Duration 0:46
Immigration Minister Marc Miller says any time spent focusing on some Liberal MPs' efforts to oust Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is a minute thats not spent on Pierre Poilievre and what he wants to do to this country. Miller says Trudeau has the support of the vast majority of caucus and the entirety of cabinet.

As national polls suggest the Liberal Party is headed for a defeat at the next election, some Liberal MPs are getting ready to confront Trudeau at Wednesday's national caucus meeting over their dissatisfaction with his leadership.

After nine years in government, Trudeau's popularity has plummeted.

The CBC Poll Tracker shows the Conservatives have a 19-point lead over the governing Liberals a margin that suggests dozens of Liberal MPs could be out of a job after the next vote.

The prospect of an electoral implosion has led some Liberal MPs to organize thiseffort to oust Trudeau.

CBC News has reported that more than 20MPs have met in secret and signed a document committing themselves to trying to force Trudeau out of the party leadership.

One of those who signedthat letter, Liberal MP Ken McDonald, said Tuesday that the document shouldn't be interpretedas a "threat" towardTrudeau.

Ken McDonald is the Liberal MP for Conception Bay South in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Liberal MP Ken McDonald insists a letter circulating in caucus calling on Justin Trudeau to resign as Liberal leader should not be interpreted as a 'threat.' (Olivia Stefanovich/CBC)

It's just a way of expressing a desire for leadership change, he toldCBC's French-language serviceRadio-Canada.

McDonald also said Tuesday he's prepared to give Trudeau some feedback at Wednesday'scaucus meeting.

"By speaking out and letting him know what some of us are feeling, I think it could help him make his decision," he said.

McDonald said that if Trudeau stays on despite theefforts to push him out, he will still sit as a member of the Liberal caucus.

Two other Liberal MPs who have publicly acknowledged signing the anti-Trudeau letter Prince Edward Island'sSean Casey and New Brunswick'sWayne Long also said Tuesday they are not willing to sit as Independents if Trudeau rebuffs their challenge to his leadership and stays on.

It's not just the polls that signal trouble on the horizon for the Liberals.

MPs are also anxious about Trudeau and his team losingtwo byelections in historically rock-solid Liberal ridings in Toronto and Montreal.

The Liberal candidate in another recent Winnipeg-area byelection posted one of the worst results for a governing party in Canadian history.

The party's national campaign director quit in early September. The party took weeks to announce a replacement.

Four more of Trudeau's cabinet ministers haveannounced, or are expected to announce soon, that they will not run again in the next election, sources have told CBC News.

That news comes after MP Pablo Rodriguez left caucus to sit as an Independent while running to lead the Quebec Liberal Party.

But there were no signs of dissent as Miller and other cabinet ministers gathered for their usual Tuesday meeting with Trudeau.

That meeting ran much longer than normal as some ministers offered strategies to calm a restless caucus, sources said.

"I'm a member of his cabinet and obviously we support him," said Housing Minister Sean Fraser.

Minister of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities Sean Fraser says the government will review temporary foreign worker (TFW) program after a historic surge.
Housing Minister Sean Fraser was among the cabinet members expressing support for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)

Echoing Miller, Fraser said it'sPoilievre who's the realproblem.

"We are up against somebody who is campaigning on promises to deny access to free birth control for women, who won't even get a security clearance to look into allegations about his own caucus members being engaged in foreign interference," he said, citingPoilievre'scontroversial decision to forgo getting the necessary credentials to review top-secret documents.

Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson suggested this latest attempt to take Trudeau out will fizzle.

"At the end of the day, we will have a robust debate, we will come out with, in my view, support for the prime minister and move forward with the election," he said.

As for wayward Liberal MPs like P.E.I.'s Sean Casey, who has come out publicly saying Trudeau should go, Wilkinson said the Liberals are "a big tent party" and there's room for dissent.

WATCH | Trudeau is facing a large internal revolt:

Liberal ministers voice support for Trudeau ahead of expected revolt

4 days ago
Duration 1:59
Ahead of a Liberal caucus meeting Wednesday, where some MPs are expected to express concerns about Justin Trudeau's leadership, his cabinet is expressing support.

"We are not a bunch of robots like Mr. Poilievre's axe-the-tax, build-homes, ride-the-donkeys that you see in question period," he said, mocking the Conservative leader'ssloganeering.

"It's important to have debates. You know, at this point, clearly in public opinion polls we are not leading. There is concern on the part of members of caucus."

Health Minister Mark Holland said he doesn't want to oust Trudeau, a leader he said can "take punches" better than anybody else.

"These are not easy times to lead. I don't know anybody who's having an easy time anywhere leading, but the prime minister has my full confidence and the full confidence of most of my colleagues," he said.

With files from the CBC's Louis Blouin, Laurence Martin

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your weekly guide to what you need to know about federal politics and the minority Liberal government. Get the latest news and sharp analysis delivered to your inbox every Sunday morning.

...

The next issue of Minority Report will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.