Ottawa Citizen

PM ends retreat with cautious note on future

‘Long and complex process’ to fulfil promises

- JOAN BRYDEN The Canadian Press

SUDBURY, ONT.• Justin Trudeau is acknowledg­ing his government faces a tough year ahead full of hard choices that won’t please everyone. And he already seems to be trying to dampen expectatio­ns, at least when it comes to one of his most ambitious promises: to establish a new nationto-nation relationsh­ip with Canada’s indigenous people.

The prime minister wrapped up a two-day cabinet retreat Monday, praising his government’s accomplish­ments thus far but conceding there’s more work ahead of it than behind.

“There are going to be difficult decisions and challenges ahead of us on everything from natural resources to investment­s to trade deals,” Trudeau told a closing news conference, his ministers arrayed behind him on the bank of a picturesqu­e northern Ontario lake.

Trudeau’s comment echoed a warning issued at the retreat Sunday by Sir Michael Barber, a British guru on “deliverolo­gy” — the art of ensuring government­s deliver on their promises — who’s been advising the Liberal administra­tion.

Having spent the first 10 months of their mandate enjoying a prolonged honeymoon and consulting with Canadians on dozens of different issues, Barber effectivel­y told ministers it’s time to fish or cut bait.

“If you want to generate results … then in Year 2 you really need a focus on relentless implementa­tion, on taking some difficult decisions where you can’t please all of the people all the time,” Barber said outside the retreat.

Trudeau continued Monday to use soaring rhetoric to describe his ambition to fix the wrongs suffered by Canada’s aboriginal peoples and set the country on a new path of reconcilia­tion.

“Canadians are telling us that in the same way that women’s issues are Canada’s issues, indigenous issues are Canada’s issues,” he said. “So, know this. Our government will not rest until we make life better for indigenous people right across this country.”

Still, Trudeau took pains to warn it will be “a long process … and a complex one.”

Tragically Hip frontman Gord Downie used the band’s last concert Saturday, watched by millions on television, to give a high-profile endorsemen­t of Trudeau’s ability to get the job done.

While the prime minister said Downie’s “vote of confidence” was “extremely touching,” he again stressed that “we have an awful lot of work to do and it’s not going to happen overnight.”

Trudeau and his ministers wrapped up their retreat later Monday with a community barbecue expected to attract as many as 2,000 people.

THERE ARE GOING TO BE DIFFICULT DECISIONS AND CHALLENGES AHEAD OF US.

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