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  2. Pierre Marcel Poilievre PC MP (/ ˌ p ɔː l i ˈ ɛ v / PAW-lee-EV; born June 3, 1979) is a Canadian politician who has served as the leader of the Conservative Party of Canada and the leader of the Official Opposition since 2022.

    • Introduction
    • Early Life
    • Political Career
    • Strandherd-Armstrong Bridge
    • Religious Persecution
    • Carbon Tax
    • National Sovereignty
    • Fair Elections Act
    • Canada Elections Act Violation
    • Charitable Work

    Pierre Poilievre is a Canadian politician who served as Minister for Democratic Reform from 2013 to 2015 and Minister of Employment and Social Development in 2015. He is currently a member of Parliament (MP), representing the suburban Ottawa riding of Carleton and serves as the Opposition critic for jobs and industry, having served as the critic fo...

    Pierre Marcel Poilievre PC MP was born on June 3, 1979 (age 43 years) in Calgary, Canada. He was adopted at birth by schoolteachers of Franco-Albertan heritage. His biological maternal grandfather, whom Poilevre first met as an adult, was Irish Canadian. He studied international relations at the University of Calgary, following a period of study in...

    In 2004, Poilievre stood as the Conservative candidate in the riding of Nepean—Carleton. He defeated Liberal Cabinet minister David Pratt by 3,736 votes. In 2006, Poilievre was re-elected with 55% of the vote, beating Liberal candidate Michael Gaffney by 19,401 votes. He has been re-elected in 2008 and 2011 with similar majorities. He was appointed...

    Poilievre advocated for the construction of the Strandherd-Armstrong bridge which spans the Rideau River. The eight-lane bridge links Riverside South with Barrhaven. Poilievre secured one-third of the project’s funding and acquired the neighbouring airport land needed to complete the Limebank Road expansion, tapping into funds already committed by ...

    On February 13, 2009, Poilievre stood in the House of Commons to make a statement concerning incidents of alleged anti-Semitism at York University. Poilievre stated his belief that Canadians must address anti-Semitism on college and university campuses. “Mr Speaker, our Conservative government condemns the latest anti-Semitic outburst at York Unive...

    Poilievre is opposed to a national carbon tax. In May 2009 Poilievre was accused of having insensitively used the term “tar baby” in the House of Commons in reference to a policy of carbon taxation from which Poilievre suggested that Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff would try to distance himself. Poilievre repeated the term later in the same questi...

    Poilievre criticized the Public Service Alliance of Canada when it was revealed that the regional sectors of that union endorsed the sovereigntist Parti Québécois in the 2012 Quebec provincial election. Poilievre remarked, “I accept the results of the election,” said Poilievre. “But I can’t accept a union representing public servants working for th...

    Pierre Poilievreintroduced Bill C-23, known as the Fair Elections Act, into the House of Commons on February 4, 2014. The bill expanded the types of ID which were accepted in order to vote and eliminated the vouching system, whereby a voter can vote without an ID and have an acquaintance ‘vouch’ for them. The bill was opposed by former-chief electo...

    In July 2015, while acting in his capacity as a Cabinet minister, Poilievre announced an expansion of a child care benefit program. During the announcement, he wore a Conservative Party of Canada shirt, stated that the payments were from “our Conservative government,” and claimed that “if the Liberals and NDP were to take office they would take the...

    As a member of Parliament, Poilievre has been involved with a variety of charities. For his 30th birthday, Poilievre co-hosted an event with Ottawa Police Chief Vernon White to help raise funds for Harvest House Ministries and Project S.T.E.P. Both charities do work within the greater Ottawa community to treat substance abuse and prevent addiction....

    • Beginnings. Pierre Marcel Poilievre was born June 3, 1979, to a “teenage unwed mother who had just lost her mother,” as he recently told Maclean’s. He was adopted by French Canadian school teachers from Saskatchewan: “[They] adopted me and raised me and basically gave me a life,” he said.
    • Jeff. He was a paperboy for the Calgary Sun tabloid, growing up in the Calgary Southwest riding held by Reform Party founder Preston Manning, and later by Stephen Harper.
    • Reformer. He made his first political donation at age 15, and attended the Reform Party convention in Vancouver in 1996, aged 17. “I like what they stand for,” he told the Vancouver Sun of the western, populist party.
    • As Prime Minister… In his second year as an international relations student at the University of Calgary, he was a finalist in the 1999 “As Prime Minister, I Would …” essay contest.
  3. May 16, 2024 · Pierre Poilievre can prove he’s a grown-up and read the NSICOP report. But what would be the point?

    • Robyn Urback
  4. Mar 1, 2023 · This year, Pierre Poilievre will earn $279,900. A third of Canadians (34 per cent) assumed his annual salary was lower than $200,000, while just 13 per cent thought it would be higher than...

    • Mario Canseco
  5. Mar 22, 2022 · The first half of that statement is right; the second half is plainly wrong. The quota value on the agricultural sector’s balance sheet was $41 billion at the 2020 year-end, but supply management is worth destroying even if the government has to pay farmers the market price of their quota to do it.

  6. Sep 5, 2022 · By Stephanie Taylor The Canadian Press. OTTAWA - One could say Pierre Poilievre has grown up on Parliament Hill. Elected as a member of Parliament at just 25, he quickly earned a reputation for...

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