The Hamilton Spectator

PM urges Liberals to focus on goals

- JOANNA SMITH

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau warned his Liberal MPs on Thursday to resist resting on their laurels now that they have formed government, and to avoid becoming too distracted by the daily ups and downs of life in politics.

“We should be proud of what we’ve accomplish­ed, but never satisfied,” Trudeau told the national Liberal caucus, which gathered in Saguenay, Que., to hammer out the legislativ­e and political agenda before returning to Parliament Hill next month.

“I know that it’s easy to get caught up in the day-to-day, but let’s never forget why we are all here in this room — to help the middle class and those working hard to join it.”

The prime minister said that vision applies not just for the rest of the year, nor even the rest of the majority Liberal mandate before the 2019 election.

“As a government, we need to look 40 years down the road, not just four. To the next generation, not just to the next election. Because when a government takes that long view, it can deliver extraordin­ary results for Canadians,” he said.

The fight against climate change is one particular­ly “daunting challenge” that lies ahead, Trudeau noted.

The message served as the more uplifting side of the main theme out of the cabinet retreat that took place earlier this week in Sudbury, Ont.

There, Sir Michael Barber, a British guru on “deliverolo­gy” — the art of ensuring government­s deliver on their promises — warned Trudeau and his ministers that the second year of government will involve tough choices and coming to terms with the fact that they can’t please everyone all of the time.

Thursday’s long-game reminder from Trudeau also comes after a rough few days of negative attention over expensive mistakes by some rookie ministers, such as the thousands Health Minister Jane Philpott spent to be chauffeure­d around in a luxury vehicle owned by a Liberal volunteer.

The caucus retreat is a way for Liberal MPs to reconnect after the summer away from Ottawa, but also to get updates from cabinet ministers on their legislativ­e plans for the fall.

Electoral reform, national security and the plans for a price on carbon are all expected to be discussed during the closed-door meetings.

So are discussion­s with newly appointed government House leader Bardish Chagger about proceeding with an ambitious legislativ­e agenda without things once again devolving into the bitter partisansh­ip that tainted the spring session.

Choosing Chagger, a young woman and a rookie MP, to replace Dominic LeBlanc as House leader was a deliberate signal the Liberals are willing to change tactics and bring down the temperatur­e without giving up control of the House.

Backbench MPs are also getting face time with ministers to air any grievances and make their pitches for pet projects and policies.

The Quebec caucus, for example, was looking for an update on what to do about Bombardier — Liberal MPs from the province are keen to see the federal government step up with a requested $1-billion bailout.

“Jobs, jobs, jobs — that’s a key priority,” said Economic Developmen­t Minister Navdeep Bains, although he would not characteri­ze it as a sticking point.

“(The) Liberal party is learning and growing right across the country (and) bringing people from every corner of the country here to understand just how wonderful it is,” Trudeau said on his way into the meeting.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at the beginning of a two-day caucus meeting in Saguenay, Quebec on Thursday. Trudeau told members they should be proud of their accomplish­ments but not satisfied.
JACQUES BOISSINOT, THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at the beginning of a two-day caucus meeting in Saguenay, Quebec on Thursday. Trudeau told members they should be proud of their accomplish­ments but not satisfied.

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