EXIT STAGE LEFT — Over the course of just a few months this winter, two of North America’s most recognizable and longest-serving political leaders were unceremoniously shuttled off stage. Now they’re back in the news cycle — and at particularly inopportune moments for the parties that they once led. Today, former U.S. President Joe Biden was scheduled to offer the first significant formal remarks of his post-presidency, addressing the conference of the Advocates, Counselors and Representatives for the Disabled in Chicago. Former Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will likewise return to the spotlight tonight in an exit interview he taped with legendary Canadian broadcaster Valerie Pringle shortly before he left office. Their respective returns aren’t necessarily by popular demand. By the time each left office — Biden in January and Trudeau in March — polls showed each leader with little public support. Biden’s Democratic Party remains underwater; the party’s approval rating was an anemic 37% in March . In Canada, Trudeau’s Liberal Party looks likely to retain control of parliament during their April 28 elections, in spite of the former prime minister. At one point near the end of his tenure, Conservatives held a 25-point polling advantage. Now, thanks in large part to Canadian anger over President Donald Trump’s tariff policy and his demeaning 51st state rhetoric, Liberals have had a stunning reversal of fortune. Trudeau’s replacement, Liberal Prime Minister Mark Carney, has hammered home the concept of Canadian nationalism and toughness in the face of threats from Trump, adopting the slogan “elbows up” for his campaign. Both for Democrats and Liberals, Biden and Trudeau are reminders of a recent past that the two parties are looking to put behind them. Directly after former Vice President Kamala Harris’ defeat in November, top Democrats raged at Biden , blaming him for losing the presidency because he refused to drop out of the race sooner. In Canada, Trudeau steadily lost support as public anger rose over a housing shortage and rising prices. Infighting among the Liberals caused his finance minister Chrystia Freeland, once tapped as a potential future prime minister, to resign in anger in December. Their return to television screens this evening only complicates their parties’ efforts to move on. Biden and Trudeau are naturally interested in restoring some of their luster and burnishing their political legacies. Party leaders and strategists, on the other hand, are eager to craft a new image free of their unpopular former standard bearers. Biden is surely aware of his political isolation, which stands in contrast to the president he once served. Former President Barack Obama remains an eminence grise within the party, with Democrats still desperate for his seal of approval and solicitous of his presence on the national stage. By contrast, Biden’s ignominious exit has left him out of favor. “I haven’t heard of one person who has communicated with him,” one Democratic member of Congress told CNN . Biden has additional incentive for returning to the fray: a slew of books describing his time in the White House, his disastrous debate performance and his decision to step down from the top of the ticket last summer are set to publish in the next few weeks . Those books are likely to renew the debate over the extent of his decline in office, a storyline the former president will be desperate to push back against with a show of vigor. So once again, Biden will take the stage attempting to prove to doubters that he remains a cogent figure who can deliver a strong anti-Trump message. His Chicago speech focused on threats to Social Security from the Trump administration — familiar terrain for him and a message all Democrats can get behind. Up north, Canadian voters will also be reminded of Trudeau’s long shadow less than two weeks before they go to vote for a new government. A preview of the Trudeau interview that was released to POLITICO in advance offered insight into how both men think about their complicated legacies. The former prime minister was asked very simply: why did he stay on as prime minister as long as he did? Canadian election law would have allowed Trudeau to exit the stage quietly as his disapproval ratings grew. His candid answer speaks to why both he and Biden are hanging around, even when people in their own parties might wish to clear them out of public life. “I was not ready to leave,” said Trudeau. “I still have more to do.” Welcome to POLITICO Nightly. Reach out with news, tips and ideas at nightly@politico.com . Or contact tonight’s author at cmchugh@politico.com or on X (formerly known as Twitter) at @calder_mchugh .
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