TORONTO (AP) – Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has attracted another opposition Conservative lawmaker to the Liberal Party, further assuring that he will soon have a majority government. Ontario Member of Parliament Marilyn Gladu alluded to U.S. President Donald Trump’s threats to Canada’s sovereignty and economy for her decision.
Canada’s Carney attracts another Conservative lawmaker to Liberal Party
TORONTO (AP) - Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has attracted another opposition Conservative lawmaker to the Liberal Party, further assuring that he will soon have a majority government.
Ontario Member of Parliament Marilyn Gladu alluded to U.S. President Donald Trump's threats to Canada's sovereignty and economy for her decision to defect to the governing Liberals. Trump has talked about making Canada the 51st state and has applied punishing tariffs on certain key sectors.
"We need a serious leader who can address the uncertainty that has arrived due to the unjustified American tariffs," Gladu said Wednesday alongside Carney in his office.
"We need a global leader with a plan to make a more resilient Canada, a stronger Canada, a more self-reliant Canada, for this critical moment and that man is our prime minister Mark Carney."
Gladu is the fifth Member of Parliament to defect to Carney and the fourth Conservative. She called it a "large Liberal tent" and said she'd rather be inside it than outside.
"She is going to be a great member of our team," Carney said. "This all comes at a time when the country as a whole is uniting."
Her defection puts the Liberals closer to having a majority government and being able to pass any bill without opposition party support.
The Liberals now have 171 Members of Parliament in the House of Commons. They need 172 to secure a majority government, which would allow them to unilaterally pass any bill.
Carney has called special elections for three districts for Monday that would give the Liberals a majority government if his party wins one of them.
The prime minister announced March 8 that votes will be cast April 13 in the Toronto-area districts of Scarborough Southwest and University-Rosedale, which are considered safe seats for the Liberals, and in the Montreal-area riding of Terrebonne, which is considered a toss-up.
The three other Conservative Members of Parliament who defected from their party to join the Liberals in recent months were Chris d'Entremont, Michael Ma and Matt Jeneroux.
Jeneroux referenced Carney's speech at the World Economic Forum in Davos as helping his decision. In the speech, Carney condemned economic coercion by great powers against smaller countries and received widespread praise and attention for his remarks, upstaging Trump at the gathering.
Carney, the former head of the Bank of England as well as Canada's central bank, has moved the Liberals to the center right since replacing Justin Trudeau as prime minister in 2025 and winning national elections
Gladu's defection is another blow to Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, who lost the last national election last year and even his own seat in Parliament. He has since rejoined the House of Commons.
Poilievre won a party leadership review earlier this year, but continues to have problems controlling his lawmakers.
Gladu, the Member of Parliament for Sarnia-Lambton near the U.S. border, served as the Ontario co-chair for Poilievre's 2022 leadership campaign.
"This is stunning, not only because Gladu is the fourth Conversative Member of Parliament to cross the floor to join the Carney Liberal caucus since the fall but also because she had been a Conservative Member of Parliament since 2015 and that she had strongly criticized the Liberals in the past," said Daniel Béland, a political-science professor at McGill University in Montreal.
"Gladu was not typically seen as one of the most likely Conservative MPs to jump ship at this time so it must be quite shocking for many Conservatives."
Béland said it will become harder and harder for Poilievre "to hold on, especially because more floor crossings remain possible in the short run. Once the Liberals get a majority government, they could stay in power until 2029 without the need for a new general election."















































