MISSISSAUGA, Ontario (AP) — Donald Trump cast a long shadow over Canada's national election — and many Canadian voters noticed.
In his first 100 days back in the White House, the U.S. president has lobbed barbs at America's northern neighbor, levied tariffs on Canadian goods and talked about making Canada the 51st state.
It had many Canadian voters thinking about Trump and how the parties on the ballot would respond to him. Prime Minister Mark Carney's Liberals won over Conservative opposition leader Pierre Poilievre, a dramatic reversal of fortune credited largely to Trump.
Here are some voices from voters casting their ballots in Monday's elections:
In Toronto, Reid Warren said he voted Liberal because he saw the party as the best amid what he characterized as “real uncertainty” in the economy particularly.
“I don’t think there is a better choice right now,” he said, voting in Toronto. "I know people believe in Poilievre but it’s the same, like, soundbites that you get from anybody else. It sounds like mini-Trump to me.”
Warren, who works at a wholesale food distribution center, said he did feel somewhat boosted by unity among Canadians created by “all the shade being thrown from the States,” but ‘it's definitely created some turmoil, that’s for sure."
“There’s only so many times that you can hear, you know, ’51st state’ and ‘governor this’ and all that disrespect that’s coming that you have to think, you know, at some point you have to take it seriously," said Duncan Garrow, a resident of Toronto.
"In a very bizarre, upside down, twisted way, this might be a good thing for Canada, because I think maybe we’ve had too much of a relationship with the United States. I mean, they’re right there, they’re always going to be our neighbor, our partner, our friend, hopefully. But thinking about other possibilities, thinking about cutting down some of our own barriers within Canada, but also thinking more internationally, just as a country, I think that’s a very healthy, progressive way to be going forward.”
Sisters Laiqa and Mahira Shoaib said they both voted for change in Monday’s election, and both said Trump's rhetoric and tariff plans influenced their decision.
The sisters, who immigrated from Pakistan a decade ago and voted in Mississauga, Ontario, said the economy has worsened and job opportunities have dried up under Liberal rule.
“It was different when we arrived,” Laiqa Shoaib said after casting her ballot. “We need to get out of Liberals.”
Laiqa, 27 and a health care worker, voted for the New Democratic Party. Mahira, 25, who works at a bank, supported the Conservative Party, and Poilievre, whom she described as “business-minded.”
“We would definitely be the 51st state if Mark Carney wins,” she said.
Kinnard reported from Chapin, South Carolina. She can be reached at http://x.com/MegKinnardAP
Liberal Party's supporters cheer on results at the party election night headquarters in Ottawa, Monday, April 28, 2025. (Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press via AP)
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge is considering whether to set aside a Trump administration order pausing construction on a major offshore wind farm for New York, which the developer says could mean the death of a project that’s 60% complete.
The Empire Wind project is designed to power more than 500,000 homes. Norwegian company Equinor said the project was in jeopardy due to the limited availability of specialized vessels, as well as heavy financial losses. It's one of five big offshore wind projects on the East Coast that the administration froze days before Christmas, citing national security concerns. Developers and states have sued seeking to block the order.
The case was heard Wednesday by District Judge Carl J. Nichols, an appointee of President Donald Trump. Nichols plans to issue his decision Thursday.
The government filed their national security reasoning in secret for Nichols to review. The administration hasn’t publicly revealed specifics about those concerns, and at least one expert says the offshore projects were permitted following years of careful review that included the Department of Defense.
During the hearing, Nichols said the government’s main security concern seemed to be over operation of the wind turbines, not construction — a contention the government would later disagree with.
He also sharply questioned the government for not responding to key points in Empire Wind’s court filings, like the accusation the Trump administration didn’t follow the right procedures and acted arbitrarily.
“Your brief doesn’t even include the word arbitrary,” the judge said. When the government said they were still contesting Empire Wind’s arguments on these points, Nichols responded, “This is not the way we do things.”
Equinor’s hearing is the second of three for these legal challenges this week; on Monday, a judge ruled that a project serving Rhode Island and Connecticut could resume.
Trump has targeted offshore wind from his first days back in the White House, most recently calling wind farms “losers” that lose money, destroy the landscape and kill birds.
The administration's stance against offshore wind and renewable energy more broadly runs counter to dozens of other countries, and experts say the world needs a major buildout of renewable electricity to address climate change.
The global offshore wind market is growing, with China leading the world in new installations. Nearly all of the new electricity added to the grid in 2024 was renewable.
The British government said Wednesday it secured a record 8.4 gigawatts of offshore wind in Europe’s largest offshore wind auction, enough clean electricity to power more than 12 million homes. It said that as Britain races to cut bills and meet growing energy demand, the price for offshore wind agreed to in the auction is 40% cheaper than the cost of building and operating a new gas power plant.
Molly Morris, Equinor’s senior vice president overseeing Empire Wind, said federal officials haven't given any explanation of the national security concerns or how to mitigate them.
A specialized heavy lift vessel, Heerema’s Sleipnir, must begin lifting the topside to the project’s offshore substation off the transport ship and onto its foundation because the Sleipnir is scheduled to depart by Feb. 1 for other commitments, Morris said. The topside weighs more than 3,000 tons and there are few specialized offshore wind installation ships in the world. Equinor’s limited liability company has spent about $4 billion to develop and construct the project.
“We have been clear and consistent that we are ready to address any additional security concerns that were not already addressed through our lengthy engagement with various defense agencies,” Morris said.
Monday's hearing was in the same federal court, with Danish energy company Orsted prevailing. A judge ruled that work on its project, called Revolution Wind, can resume while the administration considers ways to mitigate its national security concerns. Revolution Wind is nearly complete.
After that hearing, White House spokesperson Taylor Rogers said the pause is meant to protect the national security of the American people, and “we look forward to ultimate victory on the issue.”
The Trump administration paused leases for the Vineyard Wind project under construction in Massachusetts, Revolution Wind, Coastal Virginia Offshore Wind, and two projects in New York: Sunrise Wind and Empire Wind. New York’s attorney general sued the Trump administration on Friday over Empire Wind and Sunrise Wind. The administration previously halted work on both Empire Wind and Revolution Wind.
McDermott reported from Providence, Rhode Island.
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Blades and turbine bases for offshore wind sit at a staging area at New London State Pier, Wednesday, Jan. 14, 2026, in New London, Conn. (AP Photo/Matt O'Brien)
FILE - Wind turbines operate at Vineyard Wind 1 offshore wind farm off the coast of Massachusetts, July 19, 2025. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster, File)
FILE - A sign for the company Equinor is displayed on Oct. 28, 2020, in Fornebu, Norway. (Håkon Mosvold Larsen/NTB Scanpix via AP, File)