| | Blue Mondays | After the dust settled on the Canadian federal election last month, the Liberals held a minority government under Leader Mark Carney. In what CBC News said was a "startling upset," Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre lost his seat.
Poilievre was knocking on doors in an Ottawa-area riding when a CBC News reporter met him before the federal election of 2004. She said he was running in a seat that Conservative Party strategists were pouring resources into because, like others across Canada, it was on their 'blue list' of possible winners.
"This is Main Street, Ontario," said then 24-year-old Poilievre (who was identified on-screen and by the reporter as Pierre Poilevre) as the pair walked in the riding. "You know, it's part rural, part suburban, [a] lot of middle-class families, and it would send a signal that the Conservative Party is here, in Ontario, to stay." | | | | | Leadership qualities | CBC News described the New Democratic Party's results in the 2025 election as "the worst showing of the party's history," noting "a repeated decline in the party's vote share and seat count" since its success under Leader Jack Layton in 2011. Leader Jagmeet Singh stepped down from his role that very night.
When the NDP elected its first leader in 1961, folksinger Joe Glazer led the convention in a rendition of This Land is Your Land before the contenders, Hazen Argue and Tommy Douglas, made speeches at an Ottawa convention. Host Norman DePoe remarked on the "signs and shouting" among the crowd.
"This is a reminder not only of the hoopla that's now accepted here, but of the tremendous personalization of Canadian politics," added Robert McKenzie, his fellow broadcaster. "You'd almost think this was a presidential campaign coming up, a direct election in a few years' time for prime minister." | | | |