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According to a new study by Ekos, Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre is projected to lose his seat in Parliament in Canada’s next federal election. Poilievre currently represents the Ottawa riding of Carleton.
The study finds the Liberals polling at 50%, followed by the Conservatives at 35% and the NDP at 7%. The Liberals are projected to win 251 seats, followed by the Conservatives with 90 seats.
According to 338Canada, the odds of a Liberal victory in the coming election are 97%.
Liberal Party leader Mark Carney now leads Pierre Poilievre in net favourability by 43 points.
Honest question: if PP loses his seat, does he stop being CPC leader?
No.
Just even more impotent, if that’s possible…
No, in the same way that Mark Carney was not required to have a seat to be the Liberal leader.
This is how parliamentary democracy works. “Unelected” leaders are a perfectly normal component of the system, because we vote for MPs and then the MPs decide how to govern with that mandate.
Now, in practical terms, losing your seat is a death knell for a party leader at this scale. While nothing in our governance or party procedure would obligate him to step down, his tenure would still be measured in days at that point.
It would most likely spark a leadership review and a possible change of leadership. Harper survived the government being the opposition, but that was back when the CPC was newly formed. After that, losing an election has resulted in a change in leadership. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conservative_Party_of_Canada#Election_results
Bonnie Crombie stayed on as OLP leader, after not being elected, and with approval from the party.