The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Trudeau faces difficult questions

Prime minister grilled by town hall crowd in Halifax

-

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau faced difficult questions from the crowd at a town hall in the Halifax area Tuesday, including from a member of the navy who has ALS and from the mother of a boy with severe autism.

A man with ALS who identified himself as the father of two young children and a member of the navy asked Trudeau why he doesn’t have the right to try experiment­al drugs to fight his terminal illness.

“If it is my right to be able to choose death due to my terminal illness, why am I not allowed the right to try experiment­al drugs that have passed the Phase 1 medical study in Canada?” the man said during the question-and-answer session at a school gym in the Halifax suburb of Lower Sackville, pointing to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms section on the right to life.

“Why are my only options to die now, or wait to die, when what I want is the right to try?”

Trudeau responded by telling the man that ALS has affected him personally, noting the death of longtime MP Mauril Belanger, who he described as a friend and mentor.

“I know the challenges ahead of you,” said Trudeau, as more than 1,000 people sat in grey chairs in a circle around him in what was the first of a new series of town hall meetings across the country.

He said the process of approving such drugs needs to be rigorous and based on science.

“I know there are always new approaches and new techniques that people look to with hope,” said Trudeau, the sleeves of his collared shirt rolled up on his forearms.

“We have to make sure that we’re going through rigorous scientific processes in terms of what is going to work and what is going to be effective.”

Carly Sutherland, whose nine-year-old son Callum has severe autism and suffers from violently aggressive fits, asked the prime minister to commit to national autism strategy.

She noted the Senate has called for such a plan, and issued a report a decade ago calling for more assistance.

Trudeau acknowledg­ed that she’s not alone in her struggles, but avoided directly answering her question about a national autism strategy.

“We recognize that education and health-care delivery are very much a responsibi­lity for the provinces. But there is more that the federal government can and is doing on the research side, on the advocacy side, and on the support side,” he said.

A health-care worker also expressed his concern with the minimum age to buy recreation­al marijuana being set at 18, citing studies that show it can be problemati­c for brain developmen­t in young people. Trudeau reassured that Ottawa’s plan is meant to help keep cannabis out of the hands of young people.

“We know that setting the age too high simply encourages the continuati­on of a black market,” said Trudeau.

“It’s not a perfect solution — not by any means. But it is a better solution than the one we have right now, and it’s grounded in facts and science and a responsibl­e approach to public safety and public health.”

Trudeau also faced questions about his controvers­ial Bahamas vacation, pensions for veterans, the Omar Khadr lawsuit settlement and about Abdoul Abdi, a 23-year-old former child refugee who is facing deportatio­n to Somalia.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS/ANDREW VAUGHAN ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau works his way through the crowd at a town hall meeting in Lower Sackville, N.S. on Tuesday.
THE CANADIAN PRESS/ANDREW VAUGHAN Prime Minister Justin Trudeau works his way through the crowd at a town hall meeting in Lower Sackville, N.S. on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada