CBC Edition

Liberal backbenche­r calls for Trudeau to resign in email to caucus

- Catharine Tunney

Liberal backbenche­r Wayne Long has sent an email to caucus calling for

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to resign as party leader after the party lost a Toronto-area riding that's been solidly Liberal for decades earlier this week.

The New Brunswick MP is the first Liberal caucus mem‐ ber to openly call for Trudeau's resignatio­n since Tuesday's byelection upset in

Toronto-St. Paul's.

"For the future of our party and for the good of our country, we need new leader‐ ship and a new direction," Long wrote in an email ob‐ tained by CBC News.

"The voters have spoken loud and clear they want change. I agree."

The Saint John-Rothesay MP, who has spoken out against his government in the past, is not re-offering in the next election.

Newfoundla­nd and Labrador MP Ken McDonald responded to the email with, "Well said!"

He later told CBC News he liked how Long articulate­d himself but isn't calling for Trudeau to resign.

The Avalon MP, who has voted against his own party twice on the carbon tax, said it's the prime minister's deci‐ sion to make alone, but stressed the need for an ur‐ gent, in-person caucus meet‐ ing with Trudeau.

According to sources who have seen the email chain, Kingston MP Mark Gerretsen asked members to stop hit‐ ting reply-all.

Trudeau, who has not taken questions from re‐ porters since the byelection, has insisted he plans to stay on as leader.

"I and my entire team have much more hard work to do to deliver tangible, real progress that Canadians can see and feel," he said in a media statement this week.

Before this week's vote, a Conservati­ve candidate had‐ n't been competitiv­e in Toronto-St. Paul's since the 1980s. The party hadn't won a seat in urban Toronto since the 2011 federal election.

Conservati­ve Don Stewart secured the breakthrou­gh, beating Liberal candidate Leslie Church by 590 votes.

CBC has reached out to Long for comment.

In 2017, he was kicked off two parliament­ary commit‐ tees after he supported a failed Conservati­ve motion related to proposed small business tax changes.

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