Bitcoin-friendly Conservative Chief Pierre Poilievre will now not be a Member of Parliament after dropping his seat in an election which noticed Mark Carney’s Liberal Occasion safe sufficient seats to type at the least a minority authorities.
Information from Elections Canada, reported by the CBC, exhibits Poilievre misplaced his Ottawa-area seat to Liberal Bruce Fanjoy on Monday evening after a 5-week election cycle triggered by Carney, the present Prime Minister, final month.

Total, the Liberal get together took roughly 162 seats as of 12:00 a.m. Japanese Time, which is sufficient to type a minority authorities.
That is fewer than latest polls forecast, which projected {that a} Carney-led Liberal get together would hit majority authorities territory — 172 seats — given the threats U.S. President Donald Trump made to the nation’s sovereignty and the punitive tariffs the White Home was directing northward.
Nevertheless, CBC Information famous as of midnight that votes have been nonetheless coming in and it’s not but clear if the Liberals will win sufficient seats to type that majority authorities.
If current outcomes stand beneath the U.Ok.-inspired Westminster system beneath which Canada operates, the Liberals would want the help of one other opposition get together, corresponding to separatist-minded Bloc Quebecois, or the left-leaning New Democrat Occasion to cross payments within the Home of Commons.
A Conservative-led non-confidence movement, ought to it have the help of one other get together, can be ample to set off one other election — although its far too early for this to be thought of.
In contrast to america, the place crypto performed an necessary position in shifting the needle on successful Congressional races, and serving to put Trump again within the White Home, it appeared to be a muted affair in Canada.
Whereas each Carney and Poilievre have mentioned crypto up to now, the problem did not come up for both campaigns regardless that it was an necessary situation for a lot of Conservative Members of Parliament.
On Polymarket, a contract asking bettors to foretell the subsequent Prime Minister of Canada crossed the $100 million mark (in U.S. {dollars}) in quantity, and a dozen different election associated questions had shut to a different $100 million in quantity collectively.
UPDATE (April 29, 2025, 06:06 UTC): Fixes typo in Bruce Fanjoy’s title.


