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Trudeau speaks of common political mission with Trump of supporting middle class

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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reminded a large town hall audience in Nova Scotia that he and U.S. president-elect Donald Trump rode to power through committing to help the middle class, though he conceded working with the new regime is going to present challenges.

Talking in the centre of a hockey rink before about 3,000 people in Halifax on Monday night, Trudeau responded to a question from an audience member who asked whether he expects he’ll have to resist some of the Republican president’s policies.

Trudeau responded by saying both Canadian and American middle-class jobs depend on a good relationsh­ip between the prime minister and the U.S. president.

“As different on some levels as my approach is from the incoming president ... we both got elected on a commitment to help the middle class and we’re going to be able to find common ground on doing the kinds of things that will help ordinary families right across the continent,” he said.

He also said it will remain important for him to remind the American administra­tion that Canada will retain certain policies such as openness to refugees and a gender-balanced cabinet.

“We’re going to stay true to who we are . ... Is it going to be a challenge? Sure,” he said.

The town hall began more than 40 minutes late to allow people time to be seated. Once it started, the tone was largely friendly until one woman asked about green energy.

“That oil has to stay in the ground,” said a woman who indentifie­d herself as Mi’kmaq.

“Why do you guys constantly bring up all these oil pipelines?”

Trudeau told the woman that we are “going to have to agree to disagree on the issue.”

As he tried to say that 39 indigenous communitie­s in Western Canada are supportive of the Kinder Morgan pipeline, he was interrupte­d by the word “lies.”

Trudeau stopped in his tracks and asked for respect.

“A little respect please, I’m giving you as much respect as I can and I’m asking for the respect back,” Trudeau said as the audience applauded.

Some members of the audience also expressed concerns about the basic problems in their day-to-day lives, such as the crumbling infrastruc­ture in local hospitals.

“We hear you’re planning on spending on infrastruc­ture, so I was wondering if you can help replace our aging hospital systems?” asked one man in the audience, referring to the Victoria General hospital in Halifax as being in “third-world condition.”

Trudeau responded by saying he’s going to work to improve relationsh­ips with provinces, but said the choices of what to spend money on in health will remain with the provinces.

“I don’t think it should be the federal government that decide what the local priorities are,” he said.

 ?? THe canadian Press/darren calabrese ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a town hall in Halifax on Monday.
THe canadian Press/darren calabrese Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during a town hall in Halifax on Monday.

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