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Trudeau’s magic fades

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau gambled with his future with today's snap election. Rather than a convincing win the most likely outcome is a draw, and a loss is not totally off the table.

Trudeau's Liberals can probably cobble enough support from minor parties to retain power. But that would be a big disappointment given he had wanted to regain a parliamentary majority.

In practical terms, he would still have license to pursue a big spending agenda that would add to the nation's growing debt. But he'd also have less room for maneuver on key issues such as Canada's sagging competitiveness and slow transition to a low-carbon economy.

The days when Trudeau swept to power in 2015 conveying a future of "sunny ways" seem a distant memory.

His conservative challenger, Erin O'Toole, has parlayed his Boy-Scout style into an effective weapon. His message has found resonance in a country that like its giant southern neighbor, the U.S., is a divided nation — the more conservative west versus the predominantly liberal east, rural versus urban.

Canadians' goodwill toward the premier has been fading for some time: there were ethics scandals during his first term and then revelations he wore blackface multiple times before entering politics. He held onto power in 2019 but lost his majority and the popular vote.

Trudeau hoped to translate strong marks on his handling of the Covid-19 crisis into decisive victory. Instead, many saw his calling of the vote while the pandemic still rages as a power grab.

And now voters' trust in a man once regarded as the golden boy of Canadian politics may finally be broken.  — Theophilos Argitis

Trudeau campaigning in Port Coquitlam, British Columbia, on Sept. 13.

Photographer: Darryl Dyck/Bloomberg

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Global Headlines

Vaccine collision | President Joe Biden will try to counter criticism of his plans to give third vaccine doses to Americans while poorer countries can't access shots by hosting a virtual summit on Wednesday where he'll propose fully inoculating 70% of the world by September 2022. As Josh Wingrove reports, the booster policy could exacerbate global inequities.

  • Expanding access to Covid-19 vaccines and the dangers of climate change are set to dominate the annual United Nations General Assembly in New York this week, with more than 100 leaders expected to attend.

New faultline | Soaring property prices are forcing people everywhere to abandon all hope of owning a home, and democratic and authoritarian governments alike are struggling with the consequences. It's not just buyers — as Alan Crawford explains, rents are soaring, too. Click here for stories from around the world on how the perennial issue of housing costs has become one of acute inequality, with an entire generation at risk of being left behind.

Center stage | The fate of Biden's economic agenda rests largely on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi navigating deep Democratic rifts between moderates and progressives, Billy House and Erik Wasson write. How she manages a stream of key legislation and those divisions could come to define Biden's presidency and what may be her last term as speaker.

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Still angry | France's fury remains high after Australia nixed a $66 billion submarine order in favor of a new pact with the U.S. and Britain. The European Union is a key trading partner for Australia and if French President Emmanuel Macron really wanted to make waves, he might try to block a commerce agreement being negotiated with the EU.

  • North Korea warned of a "nuclear arms race" after Australia's switch to building nuclear-powered submarines, calling it "extremely undesirable and dangerous acts."

  • Prime Minister Boris Johnson responded after a French official accused the U.K. of being a U.S. vassal state, saying "our love of France is ineradicable."

Shoring support | One of Thailand's most polarizing figures is rallying young pro-democracy protesters from 3,000 miles away. Every second Tuesday former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, in exile following a corruption conviction, has appeared on an online talk show from Dubai with a combined audience of more than 100,000 on Clubhouse, Facebook and YouTube.

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What to Watch This Week

  • President Vladimir Putin's ruling party is set for a decisive victory in Russian legislative elections despite simmering discontent after sidelining political opponents.
  • Christian Democrat Armin Laschet was on the defensive in Germany's third election debate as his main rivals to succeed Angela Merkel as Chancellor presented themselves as natural governing partners.
  • The U.K. government is set for a third day of emergency talks with energy companies over a bailout as a surge in gas and electricity prices threatens to push suppliers out of business.
  • China Evergrande bondholders will find out if the property giant's liquidity crisis is as dire as it appears when interest payments on two notes come due on Thursday.
  • It took officials more than 10 hours to count some 4,380 ballots in Hong Kong's first public vote since China overhauled the city's electoral system, leading many to question the hold-up.

Thanks for the almost 50 responses to our Friday quiz question, and congratulations to Thomas Hawley, who was first to identify Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison as the leader who trended on Twitter after Biden appeared to forget his name during a virtual press conference.

And finally ... Known as "Arab Street," Sonnenallee in Berlin may be the closest thing to home for many Syrians: They can buy halal meat and fresh pistachios, and women can find hijabs and female-only hairdressing salons. As Donna Abu-Nasr and Chad Thomas report, it's also one of the most visible symbols of Merkel's legacy, with her decision to open Germany's borders to 1 million refugees in 2015 changing the cultural makeup of the capital.

 

Sonnenallee street. 

Photographer: Jacobia Dahm/Bloomberg

 

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