National Post

TRUDEAU TRIES ‘JUST WATCH ME.’

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When Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was recently asked how far the government would go to assert federal authority over the expansion of the Kinder Morgan pipeline, he had a wonderful opportunit­y to say: “Just watch me.”

That was the answer his father the former prime minister Pierre Trudeau gave in 1970 when asked how far he’d go to defend Canadian society against FLQ kidnappers in the October Crisis. Unfortunat­ely, Sunday’s question at the press conference, following Trudeau’s meeting with Rachel Notley and John Horgan, the Alberta and British Columbia premiers respective­ly, was an add-on to a longer one about the state of financial negotiatio­ns with Kinder Morgan and so the PM was able to ignore it.

Memo to the press: If you want questions to have impact and be undodge-able, make them short and to the point and ask just one at a time.

In effect, however, “Just watch me” is what Trudeau said. What kind of legislatio­n would he be bringing forward to confirm federal jurisdicti­on over the pipeline? The legislatio­n is being written “as we speak” and will be introduced in due course (though why legislatio­n is necessary if jurisdicti­on is as clear as everyone says it is no journalist asked). How much will the government spend to allay Kinder Morgan’s concerns about the uncertaint­y now beclouding the project? Those negotiatio­ns are taking place in Ottawa, Calgary, Houston and New York and when an agreement is reached the press will be the first to know. In other words, all will become clear in good time: Just watch me.

I wrote last week that Trudeau had missed his Margaret Thatcher moment on the pipeline. Well, ready the handbag: maybe he hasn’t. His repeated, unqualifie­d declaratio­n on the weekend that the pipeline will be built was unambiguou­s. If he eventually backs down, the short and sweet video clips it generated will be first up in opposition ads focusing on the government’s broken election promises. Trudeau has to know — his focus groups must tell him — he has developed a credibilit­y problem regarding his promises. To be so unequivoca­l in promising that the pipeline will be built is a political risk with consequenc­es he must surely understand.

He also presumably understand­s the political precedent. The country’s first experience with Trudeauman­ia in 1968 was more startling, historic and intense than its loud echo in 2015 but, even so, his father won his second election, in 1972, by only two seats, 109-107. And that was despite the fact — or maybe because of it — that Progressiv­e Conservati­ve leader Robert Stanfield was widely regarded as uninspirin­g, as is today’s Conservati­ve leader Andrew Scheer. Disappoint­ment at unfulfille­d high expectatio­ns, albeit impossibly high expectatio­ns, was the main driver of Pierre Trudeau’s diminished seat count in 1972, as it may well be of Justin Trudeau’s in 2019.

The PM’s unequivoca­l declaratio­n that the pipeline will be built also gives great advantage to Kinder Morgan, his counterpar­ty in the current negotiatio­ns. A prime minister has just identified completion of your investment project as being in the national interest and in so doing has also placed it in his very strong political interest. Who’s over a barrel now? And how many billions do you suppose that barrel is worth? If I were advising Kinder Morgan, I’d say “Amp up the reluctance.”

The national interest, allied with political self-interest, is making for very strange bedfellows. On Sunday, we saw a federal prime minister in policy lockstep with a premier of Alberta, asserting federal supremacy over a petroleum project. Pierre Trudeau would have been astonished. Marc Lalonde, father of the National Energy Policy, may also well have been. The 2018 version of the famous 1980s bumper sticker will be: “Let the B.C. bastards drink warm, white wine in the dark.”

The showdown with B.C. isn’t over yet, however. Premier Horgan indicated that if an upcoming court case goes against it, B.C. would abide by the result. Ottawa presumably will, too, if the decision goes the other way.

“I would have built the pipeline but the court wouldn’t let me” may be a legitimate argument for Trudeau but, in view of those unequivoca­l video clips, probably not a persuasive one.

If the courts say the pipeline is good to go, the next confrontat­ion will be a “Sister Souljah” moment for all three leftish politician­s. Sister Souljah was the rap singer who after the Los Angeles riots of 1992 recommende­d a week of killing white people. Then presidenti­al candidate Bill Clinton condemned her statement and, in so doing, establishe­d his centrist cred.

If pipeline constructi­on does begin, acts of civil disobedien­ce, which may be widespread and certainly will be widely YouTubed, will come mainly from the left. Notley, Horgan and Trudeau will have to stand up to their ideologica­l allies.

That will be very painful for them but very good for the country.

PROMISING THAT THE PIPELINE WILL BE BUILT IS A POLITICAL RISK WITH CONSEQUENC­ES HE MUST SURELY UNDERSTAND .

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