『INSIDE POLITICS: Liberal Civil War: Panel Exposes Carney's Pipeline Chaos and Cabinet Breakdown』のカバーアート

INSIDE POLITICS: Liberal Civil War: Panel Exposes Carney's Pipeline Chaos and Cabinet Breakdown

INSIDE POLITICS: Liberal Civil War: Panel Exposes Carney's Pipeline Chaos and Cabinet Breakdown

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This week's episode of Inside Politics with Kevin Klein delivered one of the sharpest takedowns yet of Prime Minister Mark Carney's government, as Klein—joined by Winnipeg Sun columnists Royce Koop and Lawrence Pinsky, KC—dissected a Liberal Party in open internal warfare. The panel began with the shockwaves still rippling from Steven Guilbeault's resignation, a rare cabinet departure on principle. But the bigger bombshell was what followed: Guilbeault launching a full-scale media blitz accusing his own party of abandoning climate commitments and misleading Green Party leader Elizabeth May to secure her budget support. The Liberals then reversed course days later, unraveling the very promises May relied on. "A minister resigning is big," Koop said. "A minister resigning and then torching the government's credibility is massive." The panel agreed more resignations may follow, as BC Liberal MPs openly contradict Carney on the pipeline MOU with Alberta. Despite media hype, the trio stressed the agreement is little more than a political mirage. "It's Schrödinger's pipeline," Pinsky argued. "It exists and doesn't exist—but mostly doesn't. An MOU isn't steel in the ground." Carney's caucus fractures deepened as corporations like Stellantis publicly disputed ministers' claims about government support, raising questions about competence and honesty inside cabinet. That fuelled speculation that Minister Mélanie Joly is being quietly pushed toward a diplomatic posting to contain political fallout. The episode then shifted to raw political calculus. Koop warned that Carney's pipeline messaging may be popular with voters—but deeply unpopular inside his own caucus, creating "a political booby trap of his own making." The prime minister's struggle, he said, stems from entering politics "with no apprenticeship" and assuming he could command MPs like corporate staff. As the federal scene destabilizes, the Conservatives remain positioned to benefit—if they avoid past mistakes. Klein and Pinsky praised the strategic hiring of campaign veteran Steve Outhouse, calling it a badly needed reset as a spring election becomes increasingly likely. "Right now, the Liberals are scoring on their own net," Klein said. "The Conservatives just need to stop passing them the puck." With job losses mounting, economic fractures widening, and caucus discipline collapsing, the panel concluded bluntly: Canada's government is moving from turbulence to freefall—and the public is finally starting to notice.
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