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Canada’s Trudeau faces pressure to quit as Liberals lose election in PM’s hometown, Montreal

The loss, coupled with a recent Toronto defeat, signals waning support for Trudeau, who faces a challenging re-election campaign

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Justin Trudeau’s Liberal Party suffered another electoral defeat in Montreal, his hometown, raising pressure for the Prime Minister to step down. Photo: Reuters

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau suffered a big political setback as his Liberal Party lost a special election in a Montreal district that until recently had been considered safe ground for him.

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The defeat will raise the pressure on the 52-year-old leader to step aside before the next election, which is scheduled for October 2025 but may happen earlier than that.

It’s the second significant defeat at the ballot box in just a few months for his party. In June, voters elected a Conservative Party candidate to represent an area of Toronto that had previously been a Liberal stronghold. Now they’ve rejected the Liberals again in the electoral district of LaSalle-Emard-Verdun in Montreal, Trudeau’s hometown.

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The losses in the country’s two largest cities are an unmistakable sign of trouble for the prime minister, whose political base is heavily concentrated in urban centres.

The special election was won by Louis-Philippe Sauve of the Bloc Quebecois, a political party that advocates for Quebec’s interests in Ottawa and runs candidates only in that province.

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