Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Trudeau heads to Florida for break

Captiva Island accessible only by charter boat

- TRISTIN HOPPER

As another round of Snclavalin revelation­s broke over the weekend, Justin Trudeau was spotted taking a breather in a remote corner of southwest Florida.

“Canada’s prime minister, embroiled in a political scandal, is now escaping to southwest Florida,” announced NBC 2, a local news affiliate who got exclusive word of the visiting national leader.

The broadcaste­r dispatched a reporter to North Captiva Island, a largely recreation­al island where Trudeau reportedly rented two large homes for his family and entourage. For much of the prime minister’s visit, the affiliate also kept up a live feed on the prime ministeria­l plane, a “maple-leaf-emblazoned” Bombardier Challenger parked at Page Field, a small airport close to Fort Myers, Fla.

North Captiva Island is accessible only by charter boat, and cars are banned, with the only motorized transporta­tion being golf carts. However, Trudeau appears to have been brought to the island by a vessel with U.S. Customs and Border Protection.

The NBC2 report described a team of 40 “Secret Service” protecting the prime minister and his family from a fleet of golf carts. Trudeau’s typical bodyguards are plaincloth­es RCMP who closely resemble the Secret Service details that typically surround U.S. presidents and VIPS.

However, as a visiting dignitary, it’s possible that Trudeau was supplied with U.S. Secret Service agents for added protection. His visit did indeed pull in assistance from local law enforcemen­t, including a marine unit of the local Lee County sheriff’s office.

Trudeau is one of approximat­ely 3.5 million Canadians who visit Florida every year, particular­ly during March Break, which is this week for Ontario schoolchil­dren. Canadians also constitute 27 per cent of the state’s foreign real estate buyers, purchasing $7 billion in Florida properties in 2017 alone.

The state is also notable as the frequent weekend getaway for the incumbent U.S. president, with Donald Trump’s Mar-a-lago resort located almost directly east of North Captiva Island on Florida’s east coast.

While the Canadian public is normally informed of Trudeau’s whereabout­s, all bets are off when he takes private vacations. For a similar Florida vacation in early 2018, officials in the Prime Minister’s Office said only that he was “spending private time with his family in Florida.”

On Monday at approximat­ely 6 p.m., the prime ministeria­l Challenger jet was seen departing Page Field.

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