Mark Carney announces immediate Canada general election as he directly attacks Donald Trump for 'betrayal'
GB News
It comes as the nation is set to go to the polls next week, with Canada's relationship with its neighbour on the line
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A new poll has suggested Canadians would rather see King Charles as their head of state rather than President Donald Trump.
The poll found a 54 per cent majority of Canadians would prefer King Charles III as their head of state, compared to just 15 per cent who favour the Republican President.
This result has highlighted a rift that has formed between Canadians and Americans since Trump's inauguration, with the President repeatedly calling Canada the "51st state" of the US.
Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney has hit back, saying Canada "will never be part of the US" later adding: "I reject any attempts to weaken Canada, to wear us down, to break us so that America can own us."
Canadians said they would choose King Charles over Trump
Getty/Reuters
It comes as Canadians are set to go to the polls on April 28, with more than seven million already casting their ballots in advance.
Prime Minister Carney's Liberal Party members favour Charles with 76 per cent, with just four per cent picking Trump in the poll for MailOnline.
Meanwhile, the centre-left New Democratic Party members favour King Charles by 65 per cent compared to eight per cent for Trump.
Supporters of the Conservative Party, which is currently trailing the Liberal Party in polls, still support King Charles but at a much slimmer majority, with 37 per cent picking the Monarch compared to Trump's 31 per cent.
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Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney
Reuters
Across all major Canadian parties, 82 per cent of Canadians would prefer to rejoin the British Empire, compared to 18 per cent who favour Canada becoming part of the US.
More than twice as many Conservative Party members, 68 per cent to 32 per cent, would choose rejoining the British Empire.
Meanwhile, a total of 69 per cent "strongly" oppose the idea of Canada becoming the 51st state, with another four per cent somewhat opposed.
Just six per cent of Canadians strongly support joining the US, along with eight per cent who somewhat support it.
Conservative Party of Canada's leader Pierre Poilievre
Reuters
On the campaign trail, Prime Minister Carney, who was governor of the Bank of England from 2013 to 2020, faced off with his chief rival and leader of the Conservative Party, Pierre Poilievre, in a televised debate last week.
Carney briefly served as economic adviser to his predecessor Justin Trudeau, whom Poilievre blames for rising prices and a chronic housing shortage.
Poilievre said: "You are just like Justin Trudeau...we need change and you, Mr Carney, are not change."
The Prime Minister responded: "Mr. Poilievre is not Mr Trudeau and neither am I. This election (is about) the question of who will succeed, and who will face up to Trump."