7 Liberal leadership candidates say they've submitted nomination papers as deadline passes
Candidates needed to pay $50K refundable deposit by 5 p.m. ET

Several candidates vying to replace Prime Minister Justin Trudeau say they've submitted their paperwork and met the first financial hurdle to enter the race, although it could still take a few days to see who's made the cut.
Candidates Karina Gould, Chrystia Freeland, Mark Carney, Jaime Battiste, Chandra Arya, Frank Baylis and Ruby Dhalla all said they've sent in their nomination packages.
The leadership race is running on an extraordinary tight timeline following Trudeau's resignation announcement earlier this month and an anticipated spring election.
Under the rules set by the party, candidates had until 5 p.m. ET Thursday to submit a nomination package including the signatures of 300 registered Liberals (including at least 100 from three different provinces or territories) and a $50,000 refundable deposit.
It's a fraction of the $350,000 total entry fee. The payments are being spread over four instalments between Jan. 23 and Feb. 17.
As the race barrels toward a March 9 vote, the candidates' policies are trickling out. But no one has outlined their full platform.
On Thursday Carney, a former Bank of Canada governor, released a campaign video taking aim at Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre. The Opposition party has been critical of Carney for years, and has ramped up its attacks since he launched his leadership last week — suggesting he's a Liberal insider who favours unpopular and costly policies.
"You can't stand up to Trump when you're working from his playbook," said Carney in the video.
"[Poilievre] has been a politician his entire life, and in all that time, he hasn't fixed a thing. He just complains."
A source on Carney's campaign said he is meeting privately Thursday with MPs as they gather in Ottawa for a caucus meeting. The source, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said Carney has been focused on reaching out to grassroots organizers across the country and doing rapid one- to two-minute calls with Liberals.
Carney spoke to reporters in downtown Ottawa on Thursday on his way into an event, flanked by a handful of Liberal cabinet ministers.
"We can put this economy back on track as a team," he said. "It's not just about me."
On Thursday, former finance minister Freeland promised to shake up the party's constitution and develop a process for leadership reviews — a swipe at Trudeau. The prime minister faced mounting calls from caucus to resign last year, but they were left without a mechanism to force him out.
"For me, a huge emphasis is going to be reviving the party, reviving the grassroots of the party, reviving a real democratization process of the party," she said on her way into a caucus meeting on Parliament Hill.
"We can never again be in a position where the leader is the only person who decides who the leader is. And I think Liberal Party grassroots members and caucus need to have a greater say in what we do and how we do it."
A campaign source said Wednesday Freeland would scrap changes to the capital gains tax that she introduced as finance minister.
It's the second key Liberal policy Freeland has walked away from in her bid to become the next Liberal leader and prime minister. Freeland would also drop the consumer carbon tax if she wins.
Carney has appeared to have cooled on the Liberals' climate policy but has been less clear about his plans.
During his leadership launch last week, he said if the carbon price is going to go, it has to be replaced "with something that is at least, if not more, effective."
Party still has to approve candidates
Gould, the former House leader, has promised to freeze the carbon price but not abolish it.
"We have to be honest about the fact that Canadians have lost trust in our party and part of it is that I do not think that we responded to the issues that they were telling us mattered to them," she said Thursday after submitting her papers.