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After a career of preparing, Poilievre waits to see if voters see him as prime minister

OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre began election day confronting the issue that most stands in his way to achieving his years-long quest to become prime minister: U.S. President Donald Trump.

The American president, whose trade war with Canada and constant threats of annexation, once again inserted himself into the country’s politics. This time, suggesting in a Truth Social post that as Canadians go to the polls, they should vote to become the 51st state.

It is exactly the type of behaviour that he allowed Liberal Leader Mark Carney to spend the past five weeks campaigning on a promise that he has the background and experience to handle the American president.

It is also exactly what Poilievre likely did not want to start his day with, after deciding to focus his campaign on affordability issues which he argued were still top of mind for Canadians, even with a more hostile administration in the White House.

Now, after spending more than two-decades in Parliament, the only thing Poilievre can do now is wait to see if Canadians choose him.

“President Trump, stay out of our election. The only people who will decide the future of Canada are Canadians at the ballot box,” Poilievre posted on X. “Canada will always be proud, sovereign and independent and we will never be the 51st state.”

“Today Canadians can vote for change so we can strengthen our country, stand on our own two feet and stand up to America from a position of strength,” he continued.

Poilievre arrives at election day having spent the past three years campaigning for this moment and two-decades before honing his political craft.

The 45-year-old was first elected to the House of Commons in 2004. He launched his bid to become Conservative party leader in February 2022, just days after the party’s caucus chose to eject its former leader, after months of internal turmoil.

He became the third Conservative to lead the party within five years, with his two predecessors’ exits precipitated by back-to-back election losses.

Should Poilievre lose on Monday, the question before him is whether he can escape a similar fate.

For Conservatives, Poilievre’s rise to power had been predictable for many.

Known as a hard-working hyper-partisan who knew how to sell the Conservative message and had a knack for getting under Liberals’ skin with his brash style in Parliament, Poilievre nearly entered the contest two years earlier, but bowed out at the last minute.

When he eventually did run, Poilievre did as a populist and won the 2022 leadership in a whopping first-ballot victory, winning a stronger mandate than ever Stephen Harper, the last Conservative prime minister to hold power.

When the Conservatives were in government under Harper, Poilievre made a name for himself, first as an MP and then later as a minister, as an energetic and forceful defender of the government’s record, which critics said was overly aggressive and at times over-the-top.

His instincts to fight were put to good use after 2015 when the Liberals were elected and the Conservatives found themselves relegated to the Opposition benches.

Poilievre, named as the party’s finance critic, got to work mounting eye-catching prosecutions of the Liberals’ spending and scandals, building a social media following, including through his own YouTube videos, which would later come to define his brand as Conservative leader, particularly among young people and especially young men.

During the height of the 2020 WE Charity scandal, an organization that was awarded federal money which former prime minister Justin Trudeau had personal connections to, Poilievre called a press conference only to toss around papers, lambasting the government for redacting information.

Such was the type of flare Conservative supporters came to expect once Poilievre became leader.

He did not disappoint.

In 2023, an exchange Poilievre had with a local reporter went viral, as the reporter asked him about his likeness to Trump, questions that Poilievre batted away while casually crunching on an apple.

As Conservatives gathered for their the party’s convention in Quebec City that September, it looked like they were heading for victory, with for the first time public opinion polls suggesting Poilievre was taking the lead, as Trudeau grew more and more unpopular.

The Conservative lead only grew bigger and bigger, which prompted Poilievre to start calling for an election.

The party was raking in millions, smashing fundraising records, and the Conservative caucus appeared to be squarely behind the leader, reciting slogan-after-slogan that Poilievre felt was key to get Canadians to pay attention.

All that swagger from the past 18-months was nowhere to be found once the election got underway, however.

A series of events happened that upended the Conservatives’ once comfortable chances at winning. First, Trudeau stepped down, meaning the prime minister Poilievre had badly weakened would no longer be on the ballot.

Then Carney, a two-time former central banker, replaced him.

At the same time, Trump’s trade war, the drums of which the American president began beating last fall, quickly overtook Canadians’ concerns about the cost-of-living, which Poilievre had successfully championed for the preceding months coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic, as Canadians saw their mortgages and food prices rise, thanks to interest rates and inflation.

Instead of jumping on the message of presenting a “Team Canada” approach to Trump’s threats, a name Trudeau revived from the president’s first term in office, Poilievre largely kept quiet on the issue of tariffs, deciding to instead stick to talking about the affordability issues he wanted to, embodied by his call for a “carbon tax election.”

That phrase was nowhere to be heard on the campaign trail though, especially after Carney made one of his first moves as prime minister to zero the tax rate, resulting in gas prices falling at the start of April.

In response, Poilievre doubled-down, taking aim at the industrial carbon price and encouraging voters to see Carney’s decision as nothing more than a distraction.

Throughout the campaign, Poilievre demonstrated he was not in the business of pivoting, something other Conservatives grumbled he needed to do to refocus his campaign message on Trump and his tariffs, a call no one made more loudly than Kory Teneycke, Ontario Premier Doug Ford’s last campaign manager, who described the federal Conservatives blowing their 20-point lead as “campaign malpractice.”

While Poilievre bucked the calls for him to pivot, he did, however, try to soften the edges of his often intense-sounding tone, sporting more smiles and cutting out the sparring he would often do with reporters, especially those in the Parliamentary Press Gallery.

Still, Conservative candidates and those in local campaigns said his aggressive style was coming up at the doors, especially for older female voters, repelled by any resemblance to Trump.

Still, thousands also flocked to see Poilievre at massive rallies he staged across the country, including on the final day he spent campaigning in his own Ottawa-area riding.

At his side throughout the race was his wife, Anaida, who introduced him at rallies. The couple’s two children, Valentina and Cruz, also travelled with the Poilievres.

After Poilievre finished his final speech Sunday night, his wife appeared visibly emotional as the couple waved for final time for the campaign.

“Tomorrow’s the day, vote for the Canadian promise, vote for change,” Poilievre said before raising his fist into the air.

“Let’s bring it home.”

Polls close on Monday at 9:30 p.m. ET.

National Post.

staylor@postmedia.com

Get more deep-dive National Post political coverage and analysis in your inbox with the Political Hack newsletter, where Ottawa bureau chief Stuart Thomson and political analyst Tasha Kheiriddin get at what’s really going on behind the scenes on Parliament Hill every Wednesday and Friday, exclusively for subscribers. Sign up here.

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