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2025 Liberal Leadership Debates
Liberal Party of Canada leadership candidates Frank Baylis, Mark Carney, Ruby Dhalla, Chrystia Freeland, and Karina Gould take part in a French-language debate in Montreal. The debate is organized by the Liberal party and is moderated by Pierre Jobin. The party will announce the results of its leadership election on March 9, 2025.
Liberal Leadership: How we got here
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Liberal Leadership Timeline
Liberal Leadership: The Debates
Liberal Leadership: The Rules
Liberal Leadership: The Candidates
Liberal Leadership: The Race in 2025
The Liberal Party of Canada will announce its new leader on Sunday, March 9. Candidates must declare their intention to run by Jan. 23 -- and deliver a $350,000 entrance fee that's payable in four installments. Eligible voters must be registered Liberals by Jan. 27 -- and this time the party is restricting the vote to Canadian citizens, permanent residents, and those with Indian Act status.
Justin Trudeau
1990 Liberal Leadership
2023 Liberal Convention
Liberals meet for their first in-person convention since 2018. They'll debate policy, elect new party officials, and prepare for the next federal campaign.
2009 Liberal Leadership
Stéphane Dion gave notice that he would resign the Liberal leadership following the party's worst result in a federal election. The Liberals fell to 77 seats and 26% of the popular vote in October 2008.
2006 Liberal Leadership
The 2006 election placed Stephen Harper and the new Conservative party in power, leading to Paul Martin's resignation. Ten months later, thousands of Liberal delegates met in Montreal. This time, there was no automatic coronation.
2003 Liberal Leadership
Jean Chrétien announced his intention to retire in August 2002. Paul Martin ran for a second time, hoping to replace the man who defeated him 13 years earlier and became prime minister in 1993.
1984 Liberal Leadership
Liberal hopefuls returned to the same arena floor 16 years later as Pierre Trudeau bid farewell to both the leadership and the prime minister’s office.
1968 Liberal Leadership
The race to succeed Lester B. Pearson produced one of the most dramatic conventions in Canadian political history.
1958 Liberal Leadership
Louis St. Laurent planned to step down following the party's loss in the 1957 election and the end of 22 years of Liberal government, replaced by a Progressive Conservative minority.
1948 Liberal Leadership
Twenty-nine years to the day of W.L. Mackenzie King's 1919 victory, Liberals returned to Ottawa to vote on his successor.
1919 Liberal Leadership
Sir Wilfrid Laurier died earlier in the year after leading the party since 1887. For the first time in Canada, a federal party’s leadership would be decided by a full convention, which was originally intended by Laurier to renew the party after eight years in opposition.
Headline Politics
Liberal MPs on National Security
Liberal members of the Standing Committee on Public Safety and National Security discuss a new report on Canada’s national security on May 2, 2017.
News Conference – Liberal MPs on Electoral Reform
On December 1, 2016, Liberal members of the Special Committee on Electoral Reform discuss their supplemental report and respond to the committee’s majority report.