Trudeau touts common ground before France’s National Assembly
PARIS — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau ventured into the heart of French democracy Tuesday in hopes of enlisting his hosts as progressive, like-minded defenders against the onslaught of global perils such as climate change, authoritarianism and inequality.
His message — a call to arms of sorts in the face of anxiety and division both at home and around the world — was delivered almost entirely in French, and with Trudeau’s usual rhetorical flair, on the occasion of a Canadian prime minister’s first-ever speech to France’s National Assembly.
Not everyone swooned — especially not nationalist leader Marine Le Pen, and especially not when talk turned to the CanadaEuropean Union trade deal.
Tuesday’s speech came hours after French President Emmanuel Macron raised many of the same issues at the European Parliament, where he warned about a “European civil war” between democracy and rising authoritarianism.
But while Trudeau’s reception was by turns polite, warm and even raucous, it turned frosty when he mentioned the trade deal. One French MP later accused him of cheap sales tactics.
A number of MPs grumbled audibly about the trade deal, known as CETA. And Le Pen, the National Front leader, sat stone-faced as Trudeau sang the praises of such values as openness and diversity.
Trudeau began his address by noting the fear and anxiety that’s at work around the globe, pushing the disenfranchised further away from what he considers the shared progressive goals the world ought to be working toward.
As causes, he cited stagnant wages and job insecurity against a backdrop of growing income inequality between the rich and the poor; divisive political discourse that breed populism and threatens democracies; and the ever-present threat of climate change.
“It is at this time that we have to admit that change does not always amount to progress,” Trudeau said.
“Confronted with the great challenges of our time, liberal democracies bear the responsibility of articulating a clear and compelling vision of the future they aspire to: The world they hope to build.”
He sought to tie Canada and France together as allies in an axis of progressivism, two countries with the ideals and the willingness to fight back against such dark forces.
Gender equality was one weapon that the two allies could brandish together, the prime minister said as he noted that France has made more progress than Canada in growing its proportion of female parliamentarians.
The speech was, for the most part, a hit — large sections of the assembly applauded lustily at various points, including the entire chamber when he mentioned Canada’s role in the two world wars.
But beyond that, Le Pen and other members of the National Front, which criticizes immigration to France and pushes for protectionism over free trade, offered only tepid applause, or sat on their hands entirely.