Waterloo Region Record

Trump’s top advisers accuse Trudeau of betrayal

- ANDY BLATCHFORD AND MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

QUEBEC — A generation after Richard Nixon called Justin Trudeau’s father an “a — hole,” Donald Trump’s administra­tion broke new ground in U.S. political trash talk Sunday when a presidenti­al adviser said there’s a “special place in hell” for Canada’s current prime minister.

The insult came in one of two blistering attacks by Trump’s top aides for what they saw as Trudeau’s betrayal of the president at the end of the weekend’s G7 summit. Trudeau’s comments, they said, undermined Trump on the verge of his summit with the leader of North Korea.

They built on the momentum Trump started a day earlier when he fired Twitter salvos from Air Force One, hours after departing the G7 summit, calling Trudeau “very dishonest and weak,” among other things.

The Liberals responded in much the same manner as former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau did upon learning of the 1971 insult by Nixon. “I’ve been

called worse things by better people,” said the elder Trudeau.

On Sunday, Trudeau the younger demurred even more, choosing instead to send out messages of his own about democracy, women’s empowermen­t and the environmen­t.

Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland followed, with a bit of Latin in her response: she said “ad-hominem” attacks weren’t useful.

The accusation­s largely confirmed the worst-case scenarios the government had for the G7 summit it was hosting in the picturesqu­e Charlevoix region of Quebec where Trump was making his Canadian debut. With German Chancellor Angela Merkel leaning in toward a seated Trump in the summit’s iconic image, the G7 leaders managed to carve out a joint communiqué with some difference­s.

Shortly after its release, Trump attacked Trudeau on Twitter over what he described as the prime minister’s “false statements” during the closing G7 news conference — and the president announced the U.S. would no longer sign on.

Trump’s closest advisers added to the attack during televised interviews on Sunday. On CNN’s “State of the Union,” Trump economic adviser Larry Kudlow said the White House was angered by Trudeau’s comments during the news conference that Canada would stand up for itself and that recently imposed U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum are “insulting.”

Kudlow said Trump “is not going to let a Canadian prime minister push him around” ahead of his high-stakes summit this week with North Korean Leader Kim Jong Un.

“He is not going to permit any show of weakness on the trip to negotiate with North Korea.”

Kudlow accused Trudeau of “pouring collateral damage on this whole Korean trip. That was a part of Trudeau’s mistake. Trudeau made an error. He should take it back.”

White House trade adviser Peter Navarro followed with his insult for the ages on during an interview with Fox News Sunday.

“There’s a special place in hell for any foreign leader that engages in bad-faith diplomacy with President Donald J. Trump and then tries to stab him in the back on the way out the door,” he told Trump’s favourite television network.

The prime minister responded by remaining above the fray.

He sent a tweet that suggested he stands by the G7 communiqué despite the president’s second thoughts.

“The historic and important agreement we all reached at #G7Charlevo­ix will help make our economies stronger and people more prosperous, protect our democracie­s, safeguard our environmen­t and protect women and girls’ rights around the world. That’s what matters,” wrote Trudeau.

After declining to respond to questions during a Saturday night photo-op, Trudeau kept his views to himself during a series of photo-ops Sunday with world leaders attending a G7 outreach session in Quebec City.

Freeland responded gently to the insults by Trump’s advisers. “In terms of the approach that government­s choose to take, Canada does not believe that ad-hominem attacks are a particular­ly appropriat­e or useful way to conduct our relations with other countries,” she said.

In his earlier interview, Kudlow said he personally negotiated with Trudeau during the twoday G7 summit in Quebec’s Charlevoix region and insisted the U.S. agreed to the language in the communiqué in good faith. He described Trudeau’s actions after the G7 summit as a “sophomoric play.”

“He really kind of stabbed us in the back,” Kudlow said. “He did a great disservice to the whole G7.”

He insisted, like Trump himself has done many times, that Canada has enormous tariffs itself — especially on certain dairy and food products.

Support for Canada and its allies surfaced in the U.S., with Republican Arizona Sen. John McCain and ex-FBI director James Comey — who Trump unceremoni­ously fired last year — taking to Twitter to offer their support.

European G7 members also expressed solidarity with Trudeau.

A spokespers­on for Merkel said the other G7 members stand by their communiqué. And French President Emmanuel Macron called on the group to be bigger than petty insults and continue to build consensus for the sake of their common goal.

“Let us be worthy of our people,” Macron tweeted in French. “It’s for them that we work together. It’s for them that we made strong commitment­s during this #G7Charlevo­ix.”

According to The Hill, a top U.S. political website, president of the European Council Donald Tusk said Sunday that there is a “special place in heaven” for Trudeau in a sly rebuke of recent comments made by one of President Trump’s trade officials.

“There is a special place in heaven for @JustinTrud­eau,” tweeted Tusk. “Canada, thank you for the perfect organizati­on of G7!”

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