Canada News : The countdown has begun for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who is constantly speaking nonsense against India. According to a survey, if elections are held now, not only Trudeau and his Liberal Party are sure to lose, but his ally party, the New Democratic Party, has also lost the support of the public. He has already lost the trust of the public due to constantly making anti-India statements and doing anti-development work in the country.
Trudeau is getting infamous for raising pro-Khalistani slogans in the Canadian Parliament, attending Khalistani events and making baseless and unfounded allegations against India. Therefore, if elections are held now, his government will not survive.
On the other hand, the New Democratic Party (NDP) led by Indo-Canadian Jagmeet Sindh is also losing popular support. In the 2021 elections, the NDP got 18 per cent votes. This is expected to fall to 17 per cent.
The agency, which has launched a pre-poll survey, has found that 32 per cent people have a negative opinion about the NDP and Jagmeet Singh. Only 20 per cent are in favour of it.
According to the last survey, the Conservative Party has 41 per cent support. While Trudeau's Liberal Party has only 27 per cent support. Its vote share is expected to fall further to 17 per cent to 11 per cent.
The survey also says that if elections are held now, Trudeau's party can get only 67 seats. Whereas the Conservatives can get 218 seats.
To the NDP's disappointment, the NDP won only 11 per cent of the vote in the Toronto—St. Paul's byelection, down from the 17 per cent it had won the year before. As a result, the NDP lost the seat it had held for 31 years since 1993.
Jagmeet Singh became the president of the NDP in October 2017. Then in the first federal election, it got about 20 percent of the votes for 49 seats in the House of Commons. In 2021, only 21 of its MPs were elected. The vote share fell to 18 percent.
Now Jagmeet Singh, a one-time Trudeau supporter, says he has reasons to be disillusioned with the Liberal Party. But he doesn't explain why.