That's true. But taken in context one also has to look at leadership approval by Canadians.
Poilievere came into the game against Trudeau with a substantial margin.
By the end of 2024 the CPC polled 45% against the LPCs 20% and NDPs 20%. That was all anti-Trudeau sentiment.
Even when Carney took over, Poilievre's numbers at the time of the election were okay. At the end of April 2025, he
polled 40.7% to Carney's 46.9%. Those are numbers that reflect the election results. Since then, however, Poilievre has been dropping in support to where, in March 2026, 56.9% of Canadians favour Carney and only 21.6% Poilievre. 66% of Canadians approve of the current government and 34% disapprove. If anything is being rejected by Canadians at this time it's Poilievre.
To keep touting the 2025 election result as a "rejection" of the LPC is clearly not where the country is as of today. Carney has shown himself as an effective leader who not only turned his own party around in the months before the election but who since then has built on strength to a majority approval. Poilievre in the meantime lost an election that was "in the bag," not to mention his own seat, and since then has steadily dropped in the polls. He's ineffective as an opposition leader, especially at a time where external factors are forcing a crisis at home.
Look. I've been voting PC and CPC since the 1970s right up to Harper and against JT. The current iteration of the CPC, however, has nothing for me anymore. I've never voted for JT or even Carney . . . But Carney and Carney's government are what this country needs at this time. They are, so far, pointing the country in the right direction. I'm part of that 66% majority that accepts the LPC government and rejects the current CPC. I don't doubt that there is still a mob inside the LPC that I disagree with. It will take time to see what carney can do with that and I, for one, am prepared to give him the time.