
This combination of images shows Canada's Liberal Party leader Mark Carney (left) and Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre. — Reuters/File
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Since Canada is preparing for next week’s elections, leading candidates, Liberal Party leader Mark Karni and conservative party leader Perry Pulore may not be much different from the post of national politics.
Carney fell on the role of the Prime Minister a few weeks ago after winning the leadership competition to replace former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. In particular, the former Central Banker has never held the elected position before.
On the contrary, the Conservative Party leader Perry Pulore has been in the parliament since 2004, who was first elected at the age of just 25. During his two decades in Ottawa, he has honored his debate skills and established himself as a strong opponent.
The next government will face the challenge of visiting tensions with the United States, especially under President Donald Trump, which has increased the provocative possibility of Canada’s US state.
Deal by crisis
Carney was born in Fort Smith, a community near the Arctic in the northwestern Canada.
He was raised in the western city of Edmonton and played competitive hockey in his youth.
He studied in the United States in Oxford, Harvard and England, and saw him as a fortunate banker in Goldman Sex, working in New York, London, Tokyo and Toronto, working in New York, London, Tokyo and Toronto.
Carney then joined Canada’s civil service, eventually appointed the Governor of the Bank of Canada in 2008.
In 2013, the then British Prime Minister David Cameron appointed him to lead the Bank of England, making him the first non -British man to hold the post.
After ending his term in London, he joined a Canadian Corporation Brook Field and served as a UN adviser to promote climate support measures.
Rumors have long been circulating that Carney has been looking at Canadian politics. When Trudeau announced his plans to resign on January 6, Carney bounced.
The 60-year-old man has argued that his experience in the Bank of Canada has been designed to deal with Canada’s stir in US relations through the financial crisis of 2008-2009 and the 2016 Brexit vote with the Bank of England.
Carney has described Trump’s threat as the “most serious crisis of our lives,” and has said that the US president “wants to break us so that he can own us.”
But the father of the four more successful marathon runner has also tried to do a quiet project, saying that he can replace Canada globally and reduce the dependence on the United States, “said one country,” we can no longer trust. “
Professor Laurie Turnbull of the University of Dlauzi noted that Carney “is not a dynamic communication style” but he is “a assured boy who knows who he is talking about.”
‘Nothing like Trump’
Polytor found himself as an infinite and effective critic of Trudeau, who became deeply unpopular in the end of the decade.
Tory’s leader has also compared Trump to the media on his attacks on the media and the former promise of Canada’s “anti -Vok prime minister”.
But polio has been forced to adjust in response to polling, which shows that Canadian residents want a leader who can compete with Trump.
“I am nothing like Trump,” Polyur insisted on a talk show in Quebec this month, and emphasized his “polite start”.
In Thursday’s electoral debate, Polyur used his closing statement to remind voters that he was born with a single mother before adopting a teacher.
He said his parents “raised him to believe that the person who worked hard can do anything. This promise seems to be broken today.”
Polytor has argued that he can face Trump, while Canada suffered US enmity, insisting on the poor liberal economic administration under Trudeau.
The purpose is to soften your accent, but for Alberta University professor Frederick Boly, stylistic changes will come too late.
He told AFP, “To become Prime Minister, they should give hope and a positive vision, and they are struggling for this transition.”
The pavilor was born in the western city of Calgary and with the help of the region’s oil industry, advance policies, including the construction of a new pipeline.
He also supported the national level as a critic of pandemic lockdown policies, which some people saw excessive.
He has been re -elected eight times through his Ottawa Area District and served in the cabinet of former Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
His wife, Anida Pulore, emigrated to Canada from Venezuela. They have two children.