Canada Votes 2025

RECAP | Canada election: Carney confirms Trump made ‘51st state’ comment during 1st call

Updated
Federal leaders criticize Carney, reporters grill him over framing of call

Carney confirms Trump mentioned '51st state' in March 28 call

17 hours ago
Duration 4:52
Liberal Leader Mark Carney, facing questions about a Radio-Canada report that said U.S. President Donald Trump made a '51st state' comment during their call in late March, confirmed Trump made the remark — but said the president had treated him as prime minister and they had discussions as sovereign nations.

The Latest

  • The federal leaders are fanned out across the country again as election day nears.
  • Radio-Canada is reporting today that U.S. President Donald Trump used the term “51st state” during his March 28 call with Mark Carney, who told reporters later on that the U.S. president “respected Canadian sovereignty” during the call.
  • Carney confirmed during an event in Port Moody, B.C., today that Trump used “51st state” rhetoric, but said the president “absolutely” respected Canada’s sovereignty.
  • Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh and Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet all criticized the Liberal leader during morning events.
  • The U.S. president suggested again yesterday at the White House that Canada would be better off as a U.S. state.

Updates

April 24

  • Bye for now!

    Jenna Benchetrit

    We’re closing up this live page for the day. Here’s where some of the federal leaders will be tonight:

    • Pierre Poilievre will hold a rally in Saskatoon starting at 6:30 p.m. CST (7:30 p.m. ET).
    • Mark Carney is hosting an event in Winnipeg at 5:30 p.m. CT (6:30 p.m. ET).
    • Jagmeet Singh is having a campaign event in Toronto at 7:45 p.m. ET.

    See you tomorrow.

  • ‘Trump situation’ weighing on Waterloo voters’ minds

    Meagan Fitzpatrick
    A man sits at a picnic table outdoors with a coffee in front of him.
    Waterloo voter Mike Gabriel thinks Carney 'is the right man for the job.' (Meagan Fitzpatrick/CBC)

    Hello from Waterloo. The sun is shining at the St. Jacobs Farmers’ Market, where I’m asking shoppers about the election.

    Many people I stopped already voted last weekend, and many people are telling me their votes were influenced by who they want to lead Canada through a trade war with the U.S.

    “The tariffs, the situation with the United States, cost of living,” said Patrick George when asked what was on his mind. “The conversation about the climate seems to have gotten lost and that does worry me. I have kids and this is the only planet we have, so I’m quite worried about that.”

    Paula Readyhough already voted and said one issue on her mind was “the Trump situation.”

    “Also, we were thinking about home ownership for younger people, somebody who is going to help the underdogs in the country.”

    I met three voters who usually vote Liberal but were thinking twice about it when Trudeau was still leading the party. With the change in leadership to Carney, they feel better about voting Liberal. “I think he should have left sooner,” Mike Gabriel said about Trudeau. “I think Carney is the right man for the job.”

    “The economy, housing affordability and the affordability of everything, not to mention the issues down south,” Gabriel said about his top issues.

  • Singh eager to highlight blue-orange differences in swing ridings

    David Thurton

    A man stands at a podium facing reporters while supporters stand behind him. A pro-union mural can be seen in the backdrop.
    Jagmeet Singh speaks to media in Winnipeg on Thursday. (David Thurton/CBC)

    I’m David Thurton, travelling with the NDP. We’re about to get on a plane en route to Toronto.

    We were in Winnipeg Centre this morning, a seat that’s probably not at risk for the party.

    A seat that probably is in play is Elmwood-Transcona, which the NDP won by just 1,000 votes in the September byelection. The party is in a tight race there with the Conservatives.

    Singh was eager today to highlight the differences between the two parties.

    “People saw the benefit of having three New Democrats here in Manitoba. Three New Democrats delivered far more than all the Conservatives combined in this province — just three. Look at what these three New Democrats deliver for you — free diabetes medication and devices."

    He noted that the Manitoba government was the first province to sign a deal to implement pharmacare.

    Singh is hoping his party’s track record will help them keep a strong presence in the province.

    The party has also brought in some extra muscle. At campaign stops, labour union leaders have been showing up before or after a busy day of campaigning.

  • Nothing is sticking to Carney

    Catharine Tunney

    Carney has not run a perfect campaign. His French can be shaky. He misidentified the tragic mass shooting one of his candidates survived (plus he mispronounced her name). And his debate performances were widely seen as mediocre. The Liberal leader can sometimes come off as prickly with reporters.

    But so far, Canadians don’t seem to register any gaffes. The Liberals have led in the polls since the election campaign started and most Canadians report that they have a more favourable view of Carney than of Poilievre. And while there has been some narrowing in the polls, Carney appears to be on track to form government Monday.

    While Blanchet and Singh have accused Carney this morning of not being truthful about his conversation with Trump, it’s unclear if voters will see it that way, let alone change their vote.

    It’s a campaign to be studied.

  • Trump’s comments give Carney chance to highlight pitch to voters

    Catharine Tunney
    A composite image of two men in suits.
    Mark Carney, left, and U.S. President Donald Trump. (Frank Gunn, The Canadian Press/Associated Press)

    This election has largely been framed as who is the best leader to take on Trump (at least, that’s what Liberals want the ballot box question to be).

    The president has been relatively quiet about Canada during the past three weeks, but reinserted himself back into the conversation yesterday.

    Speaking to reporters in the Oval Office, Trump repeated his false claim that the United States "subsidizes" Canada to the tune of $200 billion US a year.

    "I have to be honest, as a state it works great," Trump said.

    The comments gave Carney a chance to underscore his pitch with the message he wants Canadians to have top of mind as they cast their votes.

    “I will be equally clear: this is Canada. We decide what happens here,” he said during a campaign stop in Port Moody, B.C.

    “Yesterday was more proof that the old relationship with the United States is over.”

  • Carney says yes, Trump used ‘51st state’ rhetoric on phone call

    Catharine Tunney

    Carney confirms Trump mentioned '51st state' in March 28 call

    17 hours ago
    Duration 4:52

    Liberal Leader Mark Carney, facing questions about a Radio-Canada report that said U.S. President Donald Trump made a '51st state' comment during their call in late March, confirmed Trump made the remark — but said the president had treated him as prime minister and they had discussions as sovereign nations.

    Carney says he was being truthful when he told Canadians Trump agreed on a phone call with him that Canada is a sovereign nation.

    “We had discussions as sovereign nations,” he said.

    He was responding to a story from Radio-Canada, reporting that Trump referred to Canada as the 51st state during his March 28 call with the prime minister.

    Carney told reporters at the time that Trump had respected Canada’s sovereignty in private and in public comments.

    When asked if Trump made 51st state comments during the call, Carney said yes: “The president brings this up all the time.”

    Carney said Trump agreed to resume negotiations with Canada, as a sovereign country, after the election.

    “The president has certain things in his mind that he reverts back to all the time, but he treated me as the prime minister, not as something else,” he said, in reference to Trump’s habit of calling former prime minister Justin Trudeau governor.

    The Liberal leader appeared agitated when he was asked multiple questions about his framing of the call.

  • Carney’s call with Trump a ‘stunt,’ says Blanchet

    Jenna Benchetrit

    ‘It seems more and more to have been a stunt,’ Blanchet says of Carney on Trump call

    18 hours ago
    Duration 1:13

    Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet, speaking from Montreal during the final week of the federal election campaign, is asked about a Radio-Canada report that Trump did mention making Canada the 51st U.S. state during a March 28 call with Liberal Leader Mark Carney. Carney previously said Trump 'respected Canada’s sovereignty' during the conversation.

    Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet had some fiery words reserved for Carney after a Radio-Canada report that Trump referred to Canada as the 51st state during his March 28 call with the prime minister.

    Carney told reporters at the time that Trump had respected Canada’s sovereignty during their discussion.

    “It seems more and more to have been a stunt. He wanted to make a statement: ‘I am Mark Carney. I am the best of them all. I'm a great negotiator. I have managed crises in the past. I would change the world, trust me,’” said Blanchet.

    Blanchet went on to say that it appears the call was not as it had been described.

    “There was no agreement, no support for Canada's sovereignty, no beginning for a deal — just the show of a man who wanted to pretend something which appears, today, not to be true,” he added.

    “I believe many people in Canada and in Quebec will say, what the hell is that? And if that is not true, what else is not true?”

  • Carney is up now amid questions over 1st call with Trump

    Jenna Benchetrit

    We’re expecting the Liberal leader will be grilled over Radio-Canada’s report.

  • Poilievre says he’ll scrap zero-emission EV mandate

    Peter Zimonjic
    The back of a blue-grey car with a charger plugged into the left side, and a bike lane in the background.
    A Tesla parked at an EV charging station in Toronto. (Sam Nar/CBC)

    Hey there, I’m Peter Zimonjic, a senior writer here in the CBC Parliamentary Bureau.

    Today, Poilievre said he’d scrap the electric vehicle mandate requiring 20 per cent of light duty vehicle sales in Canada to be zero-emission by 2026, 60 per cent by 2030 and 100 per cent by 2035.

    The Conservative leader specifically took issue with the compliance measures around the deadlines in the mandate, saying companies will be hit with a $20,000 tax for every EV they are short on the sales targets.

    In reality there isn’t a “tax” applied to automakers for failing to hit sales targets, but there are compliance benchmarks. Here’s how it works:

    A company that doesn’t make enough EVs is in a deficit position. To get out of that deficit, they can buy an EV credit from another automaker or they can make a financial investment in charging station infrastructure. For every $20,000 they invest they get one credit, and one credit equals one EV.

    That charging station investment credit is where the Conservatives’ idea of a “tax” comes from.

    The industry is saying that the mandate deadline is impossible to meet so they will be in a deficit and that only gives them a few options: make charging station investments, buy credits, or reduce the number of gas-powered vehicles they sell in a year until they hit the mandate target.

    If a company decides to ignore the mandate, which is law, they can face court action, injunctions or even prosecution.

  • Taking the temperature in a Green-held riding

    Meagan Fitzpatrick
    A man wearing a denim shirt and dark sunglasses sits on a park bench.
    Drew Baird is a voter in the Green-held riding of Kitchener Centre in Ontario. (Meagan Fitzpatrick/CBC)

    I’m reporting today in the Kitchener, Ont., region on CBC News Network. The Kitchener Centre riding is one of two seats in the country held by the Green Party, won by Mike Morrice in 2021. I caught up with him at his campaign office.

    “There’s so much at stake in this election,” said Morrice, who won by more than 5,000 votes last election. The Green brand is strong in the region. Provincially, Aislinn Clancy just won re-election in Kitchener and Mike Schreiner, the Green Party of Ontario leader, won in nearby Guelph.

    Will Morrice keep Kitchener Green on Monday? I talked to voters in Victoria Park to get their thoughts.

    Beth Attwood usually votes for the NDP, but in the advance polls, marked an X next to Morrice’s name. “He’s doing some good stuff,” she said, citing his advocacy for people with disabilities.

    Some voters, like Drew Baird, are torn between voting based on who they want to be their MP, versus who they want to be PM. “I’m thinking possibly Green but based on current issues with our neighbour to the south, I’m thinking possibly Liberal,” said Baird.

    Michael Kelly, who said he’s looking for a “no fuss” prime minister, made a prediction for his riding: “He’s probably going to hang on to it. He’s a popular guy.”