Medicine Hat News

Poilievre attacks Trudeau over Nazi tumult; Tories abandoning Ukraine, PM retorts

-

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is fending off fresh questions about the controvers­ial Nazi veteran who was invited to the House of Commons last fall.

Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre wants Trudeau to step down, the same fate that befell former Commons Speaker Anthony Rota.

Rota resigned after Yaroslav Hunka was invited to — and lauded at — a speech in the House of Commons by Ukrainian President Volodomyr Zelenskyy.

Media reports now say Trudeau’s office also invited Yaroslav Hunka to a reception in Toronto in Zelenskyy’s honour that same day.

Hunka, a Ukrainian-Canadian veteran, fought for a voluntary unit created by the Nazis during the Second World War.

In question period, Poilievre said Trudeau himself called for Rota to step down amid the tumult — and urged him to follow suit.

“Will he hold himself to the very same standard and admit that he’s not fit for office?” the Conservati­ve leader demanded.

Trudeau tried to turn the tables, well aware of a looming vote on an updated Canada-Ukraine trade agreement the Conservati­ves have opposed for months.

“He is choosing to not stand with Ukraine, not stand with Ukrainians and not stand with Ukrainian Canadians. Why are they abandoning Ukraine?”

The Prime Minister’s Office says Hunka, who did not attend the reception, was among hundreds of potential invitees who were recommende­d by diaspora groups like the Ukrainian Canadian Congress.

The Russian embassy in Ottawa promptly seized on the controvers­y, posting a message that appeared to blame Trudeau for the whole affair.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada