After Justin Trudeau was elected in 2015 as the prime minister of Canada, a similar situation began to take place in five of the ten provinces, albeit at a slightly slower rate. The UCP and several other PC branches, along with CAQ, hae been banding together to form a fascist movement across the country. The onset of that movement was the merger of the Wildrose and the Alberta PC parties into the UCP between 2017 and 2018, which resulted in Jason Kenney being elected as premier of Alberta in 2019. Since the merger, the PC of Ontario won a general election in June 2018, which elected Doug Ford as premier of Ontario and caused the Liberal party to have its coalition government collapse, winning only 7 seats. The same thing happened when the CAQ led by Francois Legault won the Quebec general election in October 2018 over the combined PLQ and PQ coalition, which lost a total of 55 seats. Meanwhile, the conservative Saskatchewan Party would win four consecutive elections between 2007 and 2020; they would retain the majority in that province's government despite failing to make any gains. In Manitoba, the PC won the 2016 election with Brian Pallister being elected as premier, and managed to hold on to a majority in 2019 despite losing two seats. The CAQ and the UCP have gone full-on fascist since the 2020 American elections, while the PC branches of Ontario and Manitoba (along with the SK Party) are in the early stages of doing so.