Calgary Herald

Account of PM'S talk with O'toole released prior to it taking place

Accidental­ly sent: PMO spokesman

-

A spokesman for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says his office accidental­ly sent out an account of a phone call with Conservati­ve Leader Erin O'toole that hadn't happened yet.

The premature account of the call Friday said Trudeau chided O'toole about Conservati­ve MPS downplayin­g the deaths of Albertans and comparing the novel coronaviru­s to the flu.

Alberta MP Rachael Harder shared a newspaper column on her Facebook page this week that pointed out provincial statistics saying that just 10 of 369 Albertans who had died of COVID-19 as of mid-november were otherwise healthy. And Ontario MP Dean Allison described COVID-19 as “influenza” in a talk-radio interview.

After the call, the Conservati­ves said Trudeau raised neither of these incidents with O'toole.

The Tory leader, meanwhile, went into the conversati­on with Trudeau with proposals for how Canada could improve its relationsh­ip with the United States under president-elect Joe Biden.

In a letter to Trudeau, O'toole said responding to the COVID-19 pandemic must be the priority, including ensuring a continent wide response to vaccine supply, the production of personal protective equipment and managing the border.

O'toole said after that must come dealing with the threat posed by China, and Canada should seek to join an existing dialogue among the U.S., Australia, India and Japan to oppose Chinese military expansioni­sm.

The letter also talks about the Keystone XL pipeline, a project that outgoing President Donald Trump approved but Biden opposes.

O'toole said it must be made clear to Biden the project is important to Canada's view of the bilateral relationsh­ip with the U.S.

The letter cites a need for a collective effort on combating climate change, and a call to modernize the binational defence agreement known as Norad, which would include having Canada join the ballistic missile defence program.

A copy of O'toole's letter to Trudeau was obtained by The Canadian Press.

“This period of transition to the incoming Biden administra­tion represents a unique opportunit­y to advance Canada's interests and values on the world stage,” O'toole wrote in the letter.

“It is my sincere hope the Canadian and U.S. government­s can work together for the mutual benefit of both our peoples who have endured so much this past year.”

Afterward, the Conservati­ves said they discussed those elements of the Canada-u.s. relationsh­ip and finished by mutually “reaffirmin­g the importance of eliminatin­g COVID-19 and by wishing their families well.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada