Mark Carney's first six months: crisis manager or political novice?
With Bridget Howe and Sarina Rehal
It’s been six months since Mark Carney popped back into the Canadian political landscape, declared, “this is a crisis,” and convinced us he was the man to fix the crisis.
He’s been elected. He’s governing. And he’s moving fast.
But how far can a technocrat push before political gravity kicks in?
To take stock of Carney’s first chapter as Prime Minister, we’re joined by Bridget Howe and Sarina Rehal—two Liberal insiders with deep experience in government, campaigns, and caucus dynamics. They give us a blunt read on the Carney style, the risks ahead, and what might break first.
In this episode:
How Carney governs—and why it’s a sharp break from Trudeau
The pace of change: real momentum or just top-down theatrics?
Why he’s (so far) been a political novice in name only
Caucus management, cabinet churn, and how long his honeymoon can actually last
Plus:
Can Carney hold the coalition together once Trump fatigue sets in?
From scrapping the carbon tax to cutting the digital services tax—how is Carney going to pay for this?
Is he raising expectations faster than government can meet them?
And don’t miss:
Why Liberals aren’t missing Pierre Poilievre—or Justin Trudeau
Can Carney avoid a BC-style fracture over major projects and pipelines?
Why Bridget and Sarina disagree on who the Liberals really want to lead the Conservatives
Also in this episode:
📊 What Carney needs to deliver by fall to prove this isn’t just business as usual
🔮 Is he in it for the long haul—or just the crisis?