The Niagara Falls Review

‘Lift ambition’ on foreign aid for education, former Australian PM tells Canada

- JOANNA SMITH

OTTAWA — Canada should step up its support for education in the developing world in the name of fostering peace and economic growth both at home and abroad, says former Australian prime minister Julia Gillard.

Gillard, who chairs the board of Global Partnershi­p for Education, is meeting this week with fellow members in Ottawa, where she’s urging Canada to increase its contributi­on to the internatio­nal advocacy group she leads.

That contributi­on currently stands at $120 million over four years, the result of a pledge from the previous Conservati­ve government.

“We think the world is lifting ambition around education,” Gillard said in an interview.

“Global leaders like Malala (Yousafzai) are calling on Canada and the world to lift ambition, and we do think that what we do fits absolutely with Canada’s priorities for change.”

The message from Gillard, the first woman to become prime minister of Australia, goes beyond the money.

The world is looking to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who also holds the youth portfolio, to show leadership on the issue, she said — especially since Canada is hosting the G7 summit in the Charlevoix region of Quebec next year.

Her plea comes in a year when the federal budget included no new foreign aid spending, and when Finance Minister Bill Morneau has talked about doing more with less, including by involving private companies in financing poverty-reduction projects.

It also comes as the Liberal government gingerly navigates its complex trading relationsh­ip with U.S. President Donald Trump.

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