Waterloo Region Record

Trudeau cabinet tries to focus internally

Unforeseen emergencie­s demand attention away from domestic agenda

- JOAN BRYDEN

WINNIPEG — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his cabinet ministers are trying to concentrat­e on the Liberal government’s domestic agenda and how to see it to fruition in a minority Parliament — but unforeseen emergencie­s continue to demand their urgent attention.

The monster storm that buried eastern regions of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador in snow and the trauma over the downing of a Ukrainian passenger jet dominated questions put to ministers as they came and went Sunday from the opening day of a three-day cabinet retreat.

But even as those events continued to dominate the news outside the retreat, behind closed doors the cabinet was focused on a more mundane matter: preparing for the Jan. 27 resumption of Parliament for its first extended sitting since the Oct. 21 election reduced the Liberals to a minority.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau and newly appointed Middle Class Prosperity Minister Mona Fortier updated their colleagues on the cross-country consultati­ons they’ve been conducting in advance of the coming budget.

“This morning we had an opportunit­y to talk about our economy, to reflect on how well middle-class Canadians have done over the last four years but also to think about the things that we still need to do,” Morneau said.

“It was an important start to our day.”

But Foreign Affairs Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne began his day even before the early-morning start to the cabinet retreat, sending a missive to his Iranian counterpar­t stressing that Canada expects the flight data recorders from Ukrainian airlines flight PS752 to be analyzed by experts in Ukraine or France.

His missive came amid signs that Iran — which has admitted it accidental­ly shot down the passenger jet, killing all 176 aboard, including 57 Canadians — may be backing off an earlier commitment to share the damaged black boxes with outside experts.

The airliner was shot down on Jan. 8 and the tragedy has preoccupie­d the government ever since. Trudeau, who had intended to adopt a lower profile during his second mandate, has held four news conference­s on the matter, met with the families of victims and attended memorials.

Trudeau offered no comment Sunday as he came and went from the retreat.

Three other ministers — Public

Safety Minister Bill Blair, Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan and Natural Resources Minister Seamus O’Regan — spent at least part of the retreat dealing with the federal response to the storm that ravaged Newfoundla­nd and Labrador on Friday and Saturday.

“We’re making sure that there is good, close co-ordination to make sure that they get the resources that they need,” Blair said shortly after the trio of ministers got off the phone with the province’s premier, Dwight Ball.

Sajjan said 150 to 200 troops would be on the ground in the province by the end of the day, with up to 150 more ready to go if needed.

Behind closed doors, meanwhile, ministers heard from economists about the state of the economy and the government’s efforts to bolster the middle class.

Morneau declined later to go into detail about how budget preparatio­ns in a minority Parliament differ from those made during the Liberals’ first majority mandate.

He acknowledg­ed only that consultati­ons with opposition parties — at least one of which will have to support the budget if the government is to survive — will be “more robust this year.”

Ministers also heard from environmen­talists about the Liberal plan to strengthen the fight against climate change, including the promise to set legally binding targets to reach net zero carbon emissions by 2050.

Cabinet retreats outside Ottawa are part of Trudeau’s approach to regional outreach, with Winnipeg chosen for this particular outing in a bid to recognize that the Liberals were trounced on the Prairies in the Oct. 21 election — primarily because of environmen­tal policies deemed hostile to the energy industry.

They were shut out of Alberta and Saskatchew­an entirely and lost three of six seats in Manitoba.

Environmen­t Minister Jonathan

Wilkinson repeated that he’s open to suggestion­s for improvemen­t to the Liberals’ climate change policies. But he made it clear there’s little chance that will involve any change to the imposition of a national carbon tax, noting that two-thirds of Canadians voted for parties that support that approach to climate policy.

On the flip side, ministers also got an update on constructi­on of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which is intended to carry diluted bitumen from Alberta’s oil sands to the B.C. coast for export overseas.

The Trudeau government bought the pipeline for $4.5 billion in order to ensure plans for its twinning would go ahead.

Constructi­on has begun and Ian Anderson, CEO of Trans Mountain Corp., said the project is estimated to be completed by mid to late 2022.

O’Regan said he hopes that will help “change the temperatur­e” in the Prairies, particular­ly in Alberta where alienation and talk of separation have been running high since the election.

Justice Minister David Lametti, meanwhile, said he hoped to have a “frank discussion” with his colleagues about the public consultati­on process he launched last week into a court-ordered change to Canada’ four-year-old law on medical assistance in dying.

The government has accepted a Quebec court ruling that struck down a provision in the law which allows only those whose natural death is already “reasonably foreseeabl­e” to seek medical help to end their lives. But it has launched an online survey asking if other hurdles should be added to the law — such as requiring psychologi­cal examinatio­ns — once the near-death provision is dropped.

 ?? MIKE SUDOMA THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who had intended to adopt a lower profile during his second mandate, has held four news conference­s on the downing of a Ukrainian passenger jet carrying dozens of Canadians, met with the families of victims and attended memorials.
MIKE SUDOMA THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who had intended to adopt a lower profile during his second mandate, has held four news conference­s on the downing of a Ukrainian passenger jet carrying dozens of Canadians, met with the families of victims and attended memorials.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada