Mick Jagger booed after praising Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau

By 
 July 11, 2024

Breitbart reported that Rolling Stones frontman Mick Jagger recently offered words of praise for Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

Yet Jagger's comments were swiftly met with negative fallout as thousands of angry fans began booing the elderly rock star. 

"We love your Mr. Trudeau"

The incident took place during a concert held in Vancouver earlier this week, with video footage of it going viral on social media.

"We love your Mr. Trudeau, I mean, his family's always been such big fans of our band," the 80-year-old musician remarks before attendees voiced their disapproval.

However, Breitbart noted that concertgoers reacted more positively when Jagger later congratulated Canada on the performance of its national soccer team.

Poll finds that less than a quarter of Canadian voters would reelect Trudeau

Trudeau managed to eke out a narrow victory in Canada's 2021 federal election despite his Liberal Party winning just 32.6% of the national popular vote.

The prime minister's popularity has since nosedived, with an Ipso poll published last month finding that just 24% of Canadian voters want to see his party enjoy another term.

What's more, Bloomberg reported that Trudeau was stung by the result of a Toronto-area special election held on June 24.

There, Conservative Party candidate Don Stewart defeated the Liberal Party's Leslie Church despite voters not having backed a Conservative since 1988.

Scott Reid once served as an aide to former Liberal Prime Minister Paul Martin, and he was quoted as saying, "This changes everything for the Liberals and for the [prime minister]. If St. Paul's is unsafe, there is no such thing as safe."

Election website's model predicts that Trudeau's party will win just 72 of 338 seats

The election website 338Canada was created by physics professor Philippe J. Fournier, and its model suggests that Trudeau's Liberal would only win 72 out of 338 seats in Canada's parliament if an election were held today.

Meanwhile, the Conservative Party, led by Pierre Poilievre, would secure 213 seats, up from the 119 that its members currently hold.

Yet it is unlikely that Trudeau will be leaving any time soon as the next Canadian federal election is not scheduled to be held until October 20, 2025 and the prime minister has insisted that he will remain in office until then.

" A free people [claim] their rights, as derived from the laws of nature."
Thomas Jefferson