Canadians head to polls after car ramming killed 11 and Trump repeats call for ‘cherished 51st’ state

Prime minister Mark Carney’s Liberals held a 2.7-point lead over the Conservative, according to one poll

Canadian prime minister Mark Carney (L) and Canadian Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre. Photograph: Geoff Robins Peter Power/ AFP via Getty Images
Canadian prime minister Mark Carney (L) and Canadian Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre. Photograph: Geoff Robins Peter Power/ AFP via Getty Images

Canadians are going to the polls on Monday after an election campaign in which US president Donald Trump’s tariffs and musings about annexing Canada became the central issue.

Mr Trump’s threats ignited a wave of patriotism that swelled support for Liberal prime minister Mark Carney, a political newcomer who previously led two G7 central banks.

The campaign ended on a sombre note on Sunday after a man rammed an SUV through a crowd at a Filipino community festival in Vancouver, killing at least 11 people and injuring dozens.

Mr Carney briefly paused his campaign, and both he and Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre mentioned the tragedy in their final campaign events.

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Mr Carney’s Liberals held a 2.7-point lead over Mr Poilievre’s Conservatives in national support, according to a CTV News-Globe and Mail-Nanos poll released on Sunday. Nanos pegged the Liberals at 42.6 per cent support and the Conservatives at 39.9 per cent, in the poll.

An EKOS poll on Sunday suggested the Liberals hold a six-point lead, and projected the Liberals to win a majority of seats in the 343-seat house of commons and not need to rely on a smaller party to govern.

Flowers are left at a make-shift memorial where a car-ramming tragedy took place during a Filipino festival in Vancouver on April 27th. At least 11 people are dead. Photograph: EPA
Flowers are left at a make-shift memorial where a car-ramming tragedy took place during a Filipino festival in Vancouver on April 27th. At least 11 people are dead. Photograph: EPA

Mr Trump re-emerged as a campaign factor last week, declaring that he might raise a 25 per cent tariff on Canadian-made cars because the US does not want them. He said earlier he might use “economic force” to make Canada the 51st US state.

In a social media post on Monday, Mr Trump reiterated his call for Canada to become the 51st state.

“Good luck to the Great people of Canada,” he said. “Elect the man who has the strength and wisdom to cut your taxes in half, increase your military power, for free, to the highest level in the World, have your Car, Steel, Aluminum, Lumber, Energy, and all other businesses, QUADRUPLE in size, WITH ZERO TARIFFS OR TAXES, if Canada becomes the cherished 51st. State of the United States of America. No more artificially drawn line from many years ago.”

Standing on Sunday in front of the Ambassador Bridge connecting Windsor’s Canadian auto hub with Detroit across the border, Mr Carney pointed to the bridge as a symbol of peace and cooperation between the two countries for almost a century.

“That has changed, and it wasn’t us who did the changing … President Trump, the guy over there," Mr Carney said. “He’s launched a trade war that has literally ruptured the global economy, and in the process, he’s betrayed us.”

Mr Carney has emphasized his experience handling economic issues makes him the best leader to deal with Mr Trump, while Mr Poilievre has tapped into concerns about the cost of living, crime and a housing crisis.

Mr Poilievre has attracted more young voters than usual for the Conservatives, focusing his campaign more on living costs and crime.

“Time is running out, only one more day to bring home change so that Canadians can afford food and homes and live on safe streets,” Poilievre said at a rally in Oakville, Ontario on Sunday.

Mr Carney has sought to distance himself from former Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who was deeply unpopular when he said in January he would resign after nearly a decade in power. The Conservatives led polls by some 20 points around that time. -Reuters