Truro News

Trudeau ends three-country tour with global reputation and alliances intact

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Justin Trudeau is heading home from a lengthy, threecount­ry foreign tour in which the prime minister appeared to recapture his internatio­nal mojo and reassert several key alliances, but didn’t sign off on any big deals or declaratio­ns.

When the 10-day trip to Peru, France and the U.K., with a quick stop in Ottawa, started last week, one of the top questions was whether Trudeau could rediscover his footing on the world stage after recent controvers­ies in China and India.

This time, there were no eyecatchin­g outfits as Trudeau stuck to tried-and-true business suits and, on occasion, his patented button-up shirt and rolled-up sleeves as he met with world leaders, industry representa­tives and students.

There were no noticeable gaffes or tensions as the prime minister pushed his progressiv­e trade agenda, women’s rights and ocean protection while issuing warnings against rising authoritar­ianism and inequality around the world.

Mixed with those higher ideals were closed-door discussion­s - first in Peru with Mexico and the United States about the North American Free Trade Agreement; and then in the U.K. about Russia, Syria and cybersecur­ity.

The prime minister didn’t make it easy on himself, either, as he flew briefly back to Ottawa from Peru to meet with the premiers of Alberta and B.C. on the Trans Mountain pipeline, and then onto France, rather than directly to

Paris as originally planned.

Yet that stop back home may have represente­d the most concrete outcome as Trudeau announced plans to draft legislatio­n affirming federal jurisdicti­on over the pipeline and negotiatio­ns with Kinder Morgan for financial support for the project.

In Peru, just hours after meeting Trudeau, U.S. Vice-president Mike Pence did predict a new NAFTA within several weeks. In Paris, Canada and France agreed to co-operate and push other countries to honour their commitment­s under the Paris climate agreement.

In London, the prime minister also joined his counterpar­ts from Britain, Australia and New Zealand to reaffirm their tight-knit global security alliance.

And Trudeau reportedly used every opportunit­y to promote Canada’s G7 priorities and bid for a UN Security Council seat. That included in meetings on the sidelines of the Summit of the Americas in Peru and a Commonweal­th leaders’ summit in London with leaders from Chile, Peru, Argentina, New Zealand, Rwanda, Kenya, South Africa and the Caribbean.

However, there were no significan­t business deals, despite a high-profile address to industry leaders in Peru and several meetings in Paris and London. There were minor foreign-aid announceme­nts.

Trudeau did have some bold moments, such as when he used his speech to the French National Assembly to make the case for the Canada-eu free trade deal — to the anger of some French MPS and approval of others.

He was also unapologet­ically tough on the Venezuelan government, which he described as a murderous, authoritar­ian regime. And he was critical of the Commonweal­th — or at least some of its members — for not championin­g LGBTQ rights.

But the prime minister was ambiguous in a variety of other areas, including his plans to fight plastic waste in oceans and whether Russian hackers were a threat to average Canadians.

And despite touting democratic ideals, there was no mention of human rights as he met with Rwandan President Paul Kagame, who has been accused of growing authoritar­ianism. He also veered away from any significan­t criticism of Cuba.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives at Windsor Castle for the leaders’ retreat at the Commonweal­th Heads of Government meeting Friday.
CP PHOTO Prime Minister Justin Trudeau arrives at Windsor Castle for the leaders’ retreat at the Commonweal­th Heads of Government meeting Friday.

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