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Liberal leader Mark Carney responds to a question during a campaign stop on Friday, April 4, 2025 in Montreal.

Liberal Leader Mark Carney says he governs for all of Canada and called prominent conservative Preston Manning’s comments on Western independence “dramatic” during a campaign stop in Montreal on Friday. 


A man in a grey suit with a blue background.

The Liberals have dropped Rod Loyola as an Edmonton-area candidate in the federal election race, the latest dismissed from party ranks since the campaign began.


A composite photo of Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Mark Carney, candidate for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada.


A composite photo of Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre and Mark Carney, candidate for the leadership of the Liberal Party of Canada.


Traders work on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange.


Dozens of reporters hold up microphones as a man in a blue suit and red tie waves them off.

Confusion and uncertainty reigned in the deeply integrated North American auto industry on Thursday, the day the Trump administration hit imports with a hodgepodge of tariffs. 


A man and a woman walk down a sidewalk

The polls haven’t been kind to Jagmeet Singh’s NDP so far in this election. But New Democrats sometimes put out a ground game capable of beating those expectations. CBC News spoke to four incumbents from Western Canada who explained why they remain confident.


Five men

French-speaking Canadians got a first taste of how the five main federal party leaders defend their platforms beyond U.S. tariff threats in the span of two hours Thursday night on Radio-Canada’s Cinq chefs, une élection program.


Mark Carney sits for an interview on a TV broadcast set.

In his interview on ‘Cinq chefs, une élection,’ Liberal Leader Mark Carney said he’d give his spoken French skills a six out of 10. He said he’s ‘far from perfect,’ but loves the language and promised to improve to an eight or nine out of 10 by the end of a potential term.


Mark Carney’s father Robert Carney was a federal Indian day school principal in the Northwest Territories in the 1960s, at a place where residential school boarders also attended. Yet three historians are urging caution when approaching that complicated legacy. Here’s why.