A Closer Look At Canada's New Prime Minister
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Going through some old emails recently, I came across a note dated
May 29, 2001, from one Justin Trudeau, a 29-year-old schoolteacher at West Point
Grey Academy in my hometown of Vancouver and the eldest son of former Prime
Minister Pierre Trudeau. (This anecdote does nothing to dispel the myth that
everyone in Canada knows each other.)
At the time, I was a 26-year-old working for a Canadian federal agency, and I
had also enjoyed some exposure as a model. I had written Trudeau asking for
snowboarding advice (he taught that, too). "Okay, cutie," his response began,
and then he proceeded to offer snowboarding tips, along with some heartfelt
details about his mindset in the wake of his father's death the previous year.
Trudeau's note was characteristically playful, friendly and warm.
Today, he's Canada's newest prime minister after his defeat of 10-year
Conservative Party incumbent Stephen Harper in this week's elections, which also
saw Trudeau's Liberal Party secure an absolute majority in Parliament.
So who is Justin Trudeau, exactly?
On a strictly personal level, I absolutely adore Trudeau. He goes out of his way
to make time for people. And even when last-minute constraints impose, he keeps
his word. He's refreshingly authentic, hilariously funny, and he doesn't have
ego issues or take himself too seriously.
As a member of parliament, he launched himself down the stairs in an interview
to demonstrate his amateur stuntman skills. Trudeau pulled a similar stunt (to
his wife Sophie's horror) in the lobby of the posh Royal York Hotel in Toronto.
In 2012, Trudeau agreed to fight a senator from the Conservative Party, Patrick
Brazeau, in a televised charity boxing match. Oddsmakers made Trudeau a 3-to-1
underdog against Brazeau, who has a black belt in karate and a military
background. But Trudeau bloodied his opponent and won by technical knockout.
On a political level, however, Trudeau's actions can be cause for concern. He
responded to Europe's Syrian migrant crisis by proposing to take in 25,000
refugees through government sponsorship, with a $250 million investment to help
resettle them. This kind of spending -- not to mention a proposal to actually
run consecutive national deficits as a growth strategy -- has some Canadians
understandably concerned about Trudeau negatively impacting their personal
finances.
Although prone to proclamations of liberal demagoguery, Trudeau tends towards
pragmatism. While constantly droning on about climate change, he nonetheless has
supported Canada's Keystone XL pipeline. Trudeau reportedly told prominent
Canadian environmental activist David Suzuki that his climate change views are
"sanctimonious crap."
Despite criticizing Harper's politics of "fear and division" in campaign ads,
Trudeau still had the sense to vote in favor of Harper's Barbaric Cultural
Practices Act, which bans polygamy, honor killings and some other cultural
imports that run contrary to traditional Canadian values. Trudeau also voted in
favor of Harper's proposal to strengthen Canada's anti-terrorism legislation in
the wake of the October 2014 shootings at Parliament Hill in Ottawa.
Still, Trudeau has denounced Canada's participation in U.S. coalition airstrikes
against the Islamic State, claiming that a humanitarian role would be more
suitable. No, it wouldn't be. Killing the beheaders and resolving the crisis is
the priority. Trudeau isn't entirely wrong to denounce the nearly useless
yearlong airstrikes, but the wise approach would be to advocate better
intelligence, which has been sorely missing from coalition efforts. On the
bright side, Trudeau now has newly elected MP Andrew Leslie, a former
lieutenant-general and deputy commander of the NATO International Security
Assistance Force in Afghanistan, on his team, quite possibly as the country's
next minister of defense.
Trudeau shines when he listens to opposing views. With a majority government
negating the need to do so, one can only hope that Trudeau remains open to
constructive dissent -- if only because the resulting pragmatism has served him
well. He should go out of his way to find people to argue with inside the big
centrist Liberal Party tent. Unlike Harper, Trudeau has an ego that could
withstand the disagreement.
Speaking of Trudeau's predecessor, all the post-election Harper-bashing is
grotesque. Overall, Harper has done an admirable and competent job as prime
minister. He has simply been plagued by the kind of scandals and arrogance that
unfailingly take hold when a Canadian political party enjoys power for too long.
When Russian President Vladimir Putin went to shake Harper's hand at last year's
G-20 retreat in Brisbane, Australia, Harper told him, "I guess I'll shake your
hand but I have only one thing to say to you: You need to get out of Ukraine."
Not only was it undiplomatic and rude, but it was just plain bad business. Until
Obama stopped stonewalling the Keystone XL pipeline -- a long-delayed
cornerstone of North American energy independence -- Harper should have insisted
on maintaining a powerbroker posture in between the U.S. and Russia. I suspect
that Trudeau would have handled the situation much differently.
Trudeau has mastered the art of using rhetoric to appeal to as big a swath of
the political spectrum as possible, but this has caused some people to misjudge
him. It's his actions that tell the true tale. So far, he seems willing to act
in the best interests of the country even if a policy might be at at odds with
his personal views. That's what will make Trudeau particularly interesting to
watch as Canada's new prime minister.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN