Politics

Liberal MPs to meet next week as calls for Trudeau to leave intensify

Liberal MPs will gather next week for a special national caucus meeting for the first time since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told them he would take the holidays to reflect on calls for him to step down as party leader.

Caucus chair invites MPs to 'special caucus meeting' on Jan. 8

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives to sign a book of condolences for former U.S. President Jimmy Carter at the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa, on Friday, Jan. 3, 2025.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives to sign a book of condolences for former U.S. president Jimmy Carter at the U.S. Embassy in Ottawa, on Friday. (Justin Tang/The Canadian Press)

Liberal MPs will gather next week for a special national caucus meeting for the first time since Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told them he would take the holidays to reflect on calls for him to step down as party leader.

Liberal national caucus chair Brenda Shanahan called the meeting for Wednesday, Jan. 8, according to an email sent to Liberal MPs and shared with CBC News on Friday. It is scheduled to run as long as six hours.

Multiple Liberal MPs hope it will bring to an end the months of private and public efforts to try to force Trudeau to step down.

MPs say they still have no indication of the prime minister's intentions. One MP told CBC News they would not be surprised if Trudeau intends to stay on despite efforts to remove him. 

Shanahan urged all MPs to attend the meeting in person but said given the short notice, they could attend by Zoom — but under strict conditions to maintain caucus confidentiality.

Trudeau still silent about intentions

She said members "are expected to be alone in a closed confidential space, face visible at all times on screen and be wearing an HOC approved headset whether intending to speak or not."

She noted that any use of a cellphone, speaking with third parties or "other inappropriate inactivity" on Zoom would be reason for being disconnected from the Zoom call without warning.

The Liberal national caucus executive met on Friday to discuss next steps as Trudeau has continued to stay silent about his future in the weeks since Chrystia Freeland resigned as deputy prime minister and finance minister and as more MPs have called for him to resign.

The efforts to force a leadership change did not slow down after the House of Commons rose for the holidays. Instead, more individual MPs have gone public with calls for Trudeau to leave.

Regional caucuses in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic provinces have either written letters calling for Trudeau to step down or delivered that message verbally to the party leadership. 

Calls for PM to step down continue 

On Friday, Winnipeg South Centre MP Ben Carr became the first Manitoba Liberal MP to call for Trudeau to step down.

"I do not arrive at this decision easily, nor do I make it happily. Far from it," Carr said in a letter to his constituents on Friday afternoon.

"It is the culmination of daily conversations with constituents, supporters, mentors, friends, and colleagues over a prolonged period, out of which has emerged a clear belief that it is time for change."

Trudeau made his first public appearance of the New Year on Friday after vacationing in B.C. over the holidays, visiting the U.S. embassy in Ottawa to sign a book of condolences for former U.S. president Jimmy Carter. 

Earlier on Friday, Trudeau took part in a virtual meeting of the Canada-U.S. relations cabinet committee.


Read the text of Liberal caucus chair Brenda Shanahan's email to Liberal MPs:

Subject: Notice of Special National Caucus Meeting/Avis de réunion spéciale du Caucus national

To all Liberal MPs,

Special Notice from National Caucus Chair Brenda Shanahan

A special hybrid meeting of the National Liberal Caucus will be held:

Wednesday, January 8th, 2025

11am-5pm EST

West Block 225-A
Please note Hybrid Regional and Representative Caucus meetings will be held at various times Monday and Tuesday January 6th and 7th- you will be notified by your respective caucus chair shortly.

Virtual Access:

While all Liberal MPs are encouraged to attend this Special National Caucus meeting in-person- we recognize that this short notice will prevent some members from being able to come to Ottawa. Therefore we are allowing virtual access to all members who request the zoom link by their P9 email to the National Liberal Caucus email in cc- provided the usual precautions, including being physically present in Canada, are observed.

When accessing National Caucus by Zoom, members are expected to be alone in a closed confidential space, face visible at all times on screen and be wearing an HOC approved headsetwhether intending to speak or not. Any use of a cellphone or speaking with 3rd parties or other inappropriate activity while on zoom link will be reason for being disconnected from the zoom without warning at the Chair's discretion.

I regret that for cyber security reasons, we cannot accommodate members who are travelling outside Canada. Affected members are free to communicate with their regional caucus chairs for an update on the matters discussed at this special meeting.

Brenda Shanahan

National Caucus Chair

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

David Cochrane is host of Power & Politics, Canada's premier daily political show, airing 5 to 7 p.m. ET weekdays on CBC News Network. David joined the parliamentary bureau as a senior reporter in 2016. Since then, he has reported from 11 countries across four continents. David played a leading role in CBC's 2019 and 2021 federal election coverage. Before Ottawa, David spent nearly two decades covering politics in his beloved Newfoundland and Labrador, where he hosted the RTDNA award winning political show On Point with David Cochrane.

With files from Rosemary Barton