
Trudeau facing calls to resign after finance minister quits in shocking way
By Simone Del Rosario (Business Correspondent), Brent Jabbour (Senior Producer), Emma Stoltzfus (Video Editor), Ali Caldwell (Motion Graphics Designer), Heath Cary (Motion Graphics Designer), Mohammed Ali (Motion Graphics Designer)
Canada’s finance minister has resigned from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet, lambasting him on her way out. In her resignation letter, Chrystia Freeland made it clear that it was President-elect Donald Trump who drove them apart.
Media Landscape
This story is a Media Miss by the right as only 23% of the coverage is from right leaning media. Learn moreBias Summary
- Blandit magnis primis torquent congue egestas lobortis luctus aliquam class vivamus odio metus eros, cursus donec justo suspendisse cubilia consectetur ornare fames vulputate arcu habitasse.
- Quam inceptos tempor cubilia lacinia ex nam nascetur habitant nibh penatibus ridiculus donec pellentesque sem finibus, gravida condimentum est senectus tellus himenaeos habitasse dolor commodo sapien adipiscing erat molestie varius.
- Egestas et tellus gravida placerat penatibus habitant tincidunt urna maximus sed posuere eget duis, congue imperdiet lacus vehicula consectetur interdum nec rhoncus senectus ornare erat pharetra.
- Vulputate nunc quis eleifend consequat tellus pulvinar euismod vestibulum faucibus mus tempor, amet commodo taciti sollicitudin sapien nulla erat eros malesuada.
- Est fermentum convallis sollicitudin sit ultrices tellus inceptos aenean ante posuere dapibus suspendisse nullam, placerat quis primis habitasse habitant facilisi eleifend augue accumsan iaculis pulvinar.
Bias Comparison
Bias Distribution
Left
Untracked Bias
Her resignation is sending shockwaves through Trudeau’s own Liberal Party in Canada, where many are questioning how long he can — or should — hang onto power.
“Let’s put it this way,” Liberal member of Parliament Helena Jaczek said to CBC. “Firing a minister of finance who has served you extremely well is not what I would call a trustworthy move.”

Download the SAN app today to stay up-to-date with Unbiased. Straight Facts™.
Point phone camera here
“I’ve been a great defender but I just don’t see how we move forward,” Liberal member of Parliament Francis Drouin added. “I think he needs to go, yeah.”
Freeland wrote in her letter that Trump’s tariff policy presents a “grave challenge” to Canada, saying, “The incoming administration in the United States is pursuing a policy of aggressive economic nationalism.”
His 25% tariff threat is one she says they need to take “extremely seriously… That means pushing back against ‘America First.'”
Trump posted on Truth Social, “Her behavior was totally toxic, and not at all conducive to making deals which are good for the very unhappy citizens of Canada. She will not be missed!!!”
Trudeau has named Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc as Canada’s new finance minister. Trudeau had taken LeBlanc to Mar-a-Lago to meet and dine with Trump last month. Freeland did not go on the trip.
Freeland’s resignation letter revealed that Trudeau told her days ago he no longer wanted her to serve as finance minister but offered a different cabinet position. She said the only “honest and viable path” was for her to resign, saying the two found themselves “at odds about the best path forward for Canada.”
See my letter to the Prime Minister below // Veuillez trouver ma lettre au Premier ministre ci-dessous pic.twitter.com/NMMMcXUh7A
— Chrystia Freeland (@cafreeland) December 16, 2024
Trudeau has been Canada’s prime minister since 2015. As leader of the Liberal Party, his popularity has taken serious hits in recent years.
Get up to speed on the stories leading the day every weekday morning. Sign up for the newsletter today!
Learn more about our emails. Unsubscribe anytime.
By entering your email, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.
In a December Ipsos poll, only 23% say Trudeau deserves reelection while 77% say it’s time for a new party to take control.
A high 34% said Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre is best suited to represent Canada’s interests with a new Trump administration, the highest chunk. Only 22% said the same about Trudeau.
[Simone Del Rosario]
Canada’s finance minister resigned from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet, lambasting him on her way out.
In her resignation letter, Chrystia Freeland made clear Donald Trump is who drove them apart.
Charlie Angus, New Democratic Party MP: What the [bleep.] I mean, how does the Prime Minister on the eve of a statement that we’ve been waiting on for months deep-six his finance minister and think things are going to be normal?
Simone Del Rosario: Her resignation is sending shockwaves through Trudeau’s own Liberal Party in Canada, where many are questioning how long he can – or should – hang onto power.
Helena Jaczek, Liberal MP: Let’s put it this way. Firing a minister of finance who has served you extremely well is not what I would call a trustworthy move.”
Francis Drouin, Liberal MP: I’ve been a great defender but I just don’t see how we move forward. I think he needs to go, yeah.
Simone Del Rosario: Chrystia Freeland wrote that President-elect Donald Trump’s tariff policy presents a “grave challenge” to Canada, saying, “The incoming administration in the United States is pursuing a policy of aggressive economic nationalism.”
His 25% tariff threat is one she says they need to take extremely seriously … and push back against America First.
Trump posted on Truth Social, “Her behavior was totally toxic, and not at all conducive to making deals which are good for the very unhappy citizens of Canada. She will not be missed!!!”
Trudeau named Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc as Canada’s new finance minister. Trudeau had taken LeBlanc to Mar-a-Lago to meet and dine with Trump last month. Freeland did not make the trip.
Freeland’s resignation letter reveals that Trudeau told her days ago he no longer wanted her to serve as finance minister, but offered a different cabinet position. She said the only honest and viable path was for her to resign, saying the two found themselves at odds about the best path forward for Canada.
Trudeau has been Canada’s prime minister since 2015. As leader of the Liberal Party, his popularity has taken serious hits in recent years.
In a December Ipsos poll, only 23% say Trudeau deserves reelection while 77% say it’s time for a new party to take control.
Thirty-four percent say Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre is best suited to represent Canada’s interest with a new Trump administration, the highest chunk. Only 22% said the same of Trudeau.
Reporter: Prime Minister, are you going to remain in office, sir?
Simone Del Rosario: The answer to that becoming more pressing by the day. For SAN, I’m SDR.
Media Landscape
This story is a Media Miss by the right as only 23% of the coverage is from right leaning media. Learn moreBias Summary
- A rhoncus pellentesque fames habitant leo eget vitae netus class augue nam nullam id, tempor dapibus suspendisse inceptos praesent egestas iaculis consectetur mauris convallis ornare.
- Ut elementum odio praesent in diam conubia nulla dictumst ligula nisi placerat dapibus et metus interdum, facilisi nostra porta cursus tincidunt malesuada ornare primis facilisis magna lobortis varius rutrum lacinia.
- Leo curabitur tincidunt facilisi hendrerit nisi dictumst donec finibus justo fermentum aenean gravida feugiat, habitant vivamus hac imperdiet egestas duis sit laoreet cursus iaculis varius enim.
- Mauris pulvinar posuere accumsan euismod tincidunt semper ipsum ultricies non pharetra odio, congue facilisis aliquam eros magna nec varius id viverra.
- Porta lectus taciti eros torquent urna tincidunt elementum dictum erat aenean penatibus inceptos tristique, hendrerit posuere pellentesque ornare dictumst libero accumsan molestie turpis cubilia semper.
Bias Comparison
Bias Distribution
Left
Untracked Bias
Straight to your inbox.
By entering your email, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and acknowledge the Privacy Policy.