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Description

The week started with breaking news: CPC MP Matt Jeneroux crosses the floor to join the Liberal caucus — the third Conservative to do so in recent months. Joseph and Andrew unpack what it means for the Liberals' path to a majority, whether it takes a 2026 election off the table, and why Mark Carney keeps defying conventional political logic.

Then, Canada's new defence industrial strategy gets the full treatment: half a trillion dollars in procurement, 70% Canadian content targets, and the messy gap between announcements and delivery.

The episode closes across the pond, where Keir Starmer has now executed over a dozen major U-turns — including reversing a plan to delay local elections, days after promising no more reversals. Joseph and Andrew compare approval ratings that tell two very different stories about what non-politician leaders look like when they work, and when they don't.

Key Takeaways

- Matt Jeneroux's floor crossing puts the Liberals within striking distance of a one-seat majority, pending three outstanding by-elections — one of which was previously decided by a single vote.

- With a potential majority in reach and strong polling, the political case for a 2026 snap election is weaker than it was a week ago; Carney appears more interested in building a track record than capitalizing on a polling window.

- Canada's new defense industrial strategy earmarks over $500B in procurement, aims to hit NATO's 2% GDP target ahead of schedule, and sets a goal of 5% by 2035 — but the real test is whether a new procurement agency can cut through decades of dysfunction.

- Carney's appointment of Janice Charette as chief trade negotiator with the U.S -- we're big fans.

- Starmer's approval rating has hit record lows — negative 47% — worse than any sitting British prime minister in polling history; the contrast with Carney's numbers is striking and worth understanding.

- The local elections U-turn is particularly damaging because it came days after Starmer explicitly ruled out more reversals; Reform UK forcing the government's hand via a legal challenge compounds the optics.

Chapters

0:00 — Welcome back + Alberta deep dive reaction

1:30 — Matt Jeneroux crosses the floor: what it means and why the Liberals wanted him

5:00 — Updated election outlook: is 2026 still happening?

8:30 — Mark Carney's governing style and why he keeps defying political convention

10:30 — Janice Charette named Canada's chief U.S. trade negotiator

14:00 — Canada's defense industrial strategy: half a trillion dollars and 70% Canadian procurement

19:30 — Keir Starmer reverses course on local elections — U-turn number 12+

23:30 — Approval ratings compared: Carney vs. Starmer

29:00 — Tumbler Ridge, partisan unity, and a moment worth noticing

32:00 — Wrap-up

Keywords

Matt Jeneroux floor crossing, Canadian federal politics 2026, Mark Carney majority, Liberal caucus, Canadian defense procurement, NATO spending Canada, Janice Charette, trade negotiator, Canada-US relations, Keir Starmer U-turns, UK local elections 2025, Starmer approval ratings, Reform UK, Craft Politics podcast