The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Trudeau honours Allan MacEachen as ‘peerless’ parliament­arian

-

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivered a moving tribute to the late Allan J. MacEachen on Sunday, saying the former Liberal cabinet minister should be remembered as a key architect who shaped some of Canada’s most cherished institutio­ns.

“I bring the thanks of a grateful country,” he told about 400 people gathered for a public memorial service at St. Francis Xavier University in Antigonish, N.S., the institutio­n where MacEachen served as an economics professor before entering politics in the early 1950s.

“Whether they credit him or not, Canadians are living in the country that Allan J. built, and they like it,” Trudeau said, referring to MacEachen’s nickname. “Let us honour him by recommitti­ng ourselves as Canadians to continuing his life’s work of hard things done well.”

MacEachen died last Tuesday. He was 96.

As his memorial service began, the skirl of the bagpipes filled the auditorium, and MacEachen’s flagged-draped coffin was carried in by six Mounties in red serge. The ceremony also featured a Mi’kmaq smudging ceremony, a Gaelic prayer and traditiona­l Celtic music, performed by fiddler Ashley MacIsaac.

The prime minister bowed his head before MacEachen’s coffin as he took to the stage in a tartan tie honouring his own Scottish heritage.

Like so many others who have recounted MacEachen’s many accomplish­ments during his 40year political career, Trudeau made it clear that Canadians have the wily Cape Bretoner to thank for universal health care.

“We all enjoy health care because of our needs instead of our ability to pay because of medicare,” Trudeau said, noting that it was MacEachen who, as health minister in 1966, used his “peerless parliament­ary instincts” to get the Medical Care Act through Parliament.

The prime minister said MacEachen also helped bring in the guaranteed income supplement for vulnerable seniors, the Canada Pension Plan and key reforms to the country’s labour laws.

Trudeau said MacEachen and his father, Pierre, were “a match made in heaven,” because they shared the same core values.

Both men believed that all people are equal, “deserving of equal treatment under the law, equal opportunit­y to be whom we are, and to do with our lives what we choose,” he said.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? A piper leads the casket outside a memorial service Saturday for former federal Liberal cabinet heavyweigh­t Allan J. MacEachern in Antigonish, N.S.
CP PHOTO A piper leads the casket outside a memorial service Saturday for former federal Liberal cabinet heavyweigh­t Allan J. MacEachern in Antigonish, N.S.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada