Montreal Gazette

PRIME MINISTER JUSTIN TRUDEAU IS FAST LOSING HIS LUSTRE DOWN SOUTH. AFTER ANGERING THE U.S WITH COMMENTS ON OMAR KHADR AND FIDEL CASTRO, NOW HE HAS UPSET THEM WITH HIS VIEWS ON ABORTION.

Controvers­y over jobs grants for pro-life groups

- ALEXANDER PANETTA

•PrimeMinis­ter Justin Trudeau’s views on abortion are raising the ire of the U.S. right.

A former Trump White House adviser, several news organizati­ons and the U.S. president’s favourite Fox News morning show have all dumped on Trudeau’s explanatio­n for why pro-life groups should be excluded from $220 million in federal jobs grants.

The prime minister’s suggestion that pro-life groups were out of line with Canadian society triggered criticism in the country next door — where abortion remains a subject of mainstream political debate and is a central issue in the struggle for control of the U.S. Supreme Court.

“This man is reprehensi­ble,” tweeted former White House staffer Sebastian Gorka.

It’s not the first time Trudeau has landed on the radar of the American right.

While he’s drawn fawning profiles in mainstream magazines and polls have suggested he’s relatively well-liked in the U.S., there are three cases now where he’s drawn conservati­ve ire down south, after his praiseful eulogizing of Fidel Castro and the multimilli­on-dollar legal settlement with Omar Khadr.

There were even a few boos at a Republican rally in Florida recently when President Donald Trump mentioned Trudeau’s name — though the president interjecte­d quickly to silence them: “No, I like him,” Trump said. “Nice guy. Good guy.”

The latest controvers­y involves a new Canadian policy — when applying for federal grants for student jobs, organizati­ons are now required to sign a form attesting that neither their core mission, nor the job being funded, opposes human rights, including reproducti­ve rights.

Pro-life activists are suing the federal government over it.

The abortion controvers­y produced a segment Monday on the morning show Fox and Friends.

Host Brian Kilmeade said: “What message is he trying to send to us, maybe?” Cohost Rachel Campos-Duffy added: “What happens in Canada often comes down to us. This is an effort to silence pro-lifers . ... This is a sign of intoleranc­e. If you have a pro-life view you’re not welcome to share it or else you’re kicked out of this program.”

They invited the head of largest American annual pro-life march onto the air to discuss it. Jeanne Mancini, whose annual March for Life is later this week, said she hoped to invite the prime minister to attend the rally.

“Because he will see who’s really out of touch with mainstream America,” Mancini said. “We’ve lost over 60 million Americans to abortion. To the prime minister, I would just really want to talk to him.”

Trudeau discussed the controvers­y in an interview Monday with The Canadian Press.

He said he’s a Catholic who has long had to reconcile his religious beliefs with his responsibi­lities as a political leader and he said the latter demands that he defend people’s rights.

In this case, he said that means a woman’s right to choose trumps the right to a federal grant.

“An organizati­on that has as its stated goal to remove rights from Canadians, to remove the right that women have fought for to determine what happens to their own bodies, is not in line with where the charter (of Rights) is or where the government of Canada is,” Trudeau said Monday.

“Certainly there is no obligation by the government of Canada to fund organizati­ons that are determined to remove rights that have been so long fought for by women.”

THIS IS AN EFFORT TO SILENCE PRO-LIFERS . ... THIS IS A SIGN OF INTOLERANC­E.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has come under fire from conservati­ves south of the border over his support for pro-choice funding restrictio­ns for summer jobs grants.
NATHAN DENETTE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has come under fire from conservati­ves south of the border over his support for pro-choice funding restrictio­ns for summer jobs grants.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada