National Post (National Edition)

Trudeau says national unity not threatened

Prime minister accuses Tories of playing politics

- COLETTE DERWORIZ

EDMONTON • Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has dismissed conservati­ve politician­s’ claims that national unity is under threat.

The Liberal leader said Friday that conservati­ve politician­s are playing petty politics, which is hurting people across the country.

“Conservati­ve politician­s are choosing to play a high degree of politics, including bringing up threats to national unity, which we categorica­lly reject,” Trudeau said.

Trudeau’s remarks came at a stop to visit workers at Edmonton’s Trans Mountain pipeline terminal, which is the start of the line that carries Alberta oil to a terminal in Burnaby, B.C.

It has been almost a month since Trudeau gave a second go-ahead to expanding the pipeline, after the courts overturned his government’s original approval.

The Federal Court of Appeal ruled Ottawa hadn’t done a good enough job with environmen­tal reviews of the project, or consulting with Indigenous groups. Other politician­s called on Ottawa to appeal, but it followed the court’s decision with more consultati­ons.

In Edmonton, Trudeau said that if it had appealed, the only people working on Trans Mountain this summer would be lawyers fighting in court.

He made no new announceme­nts on the project other than to say that shovels would be in the ground “later this constructi­on season.”

He also spent some time talking directly with workers at the terminal.

“The world has changed,” Trudeau said. "We’re not in a situation where a government can decide this is where we are laying down a railroad or a pipeline and it’s just going to happen.

“The processes we have to go through are more complicate­d now.”

Trudeau said that’s why the federal government moved forward with Bill C-69, an overhaul of federal environmen­tal assessment­s for major constructi­on projects, which critics have dubbed the anti-pipeline bill.

“All it does is say, “If you actually talk with Indigenous Peoples and if you think about environmen­tal consequenc­es, you are going to be able to move forward in a way that will survive any court challenges people bring forward.’”

Trudeau then spoke with reporters.

“It’s important that the prime minister be here to remind Canadians that we do not have to pit one corner of the country against each other, that families here in Alberta want to see a cleaner, greener future for their kids at the same time as they need to keep putting food on their table,” he said.

“We are a government that understand­s both of those things.”

Meanwhile, at the closing of the annual premiers’ conference in Saskatoon Thursday Alberta’s United Conservati­ve Premier Jason Kenney said his province is frustrated with the federal government and other jurisdicti­ons because it can’t get its resources to market.

The Trans Mountain project has been met with court challenges in B.C., while Quebec is firmly opposed to moving oil through its jurisdicti­on.

“The level of frustratio­n and alienation that exists in Alberta right now towards Ottawa and the federation is, I believe, at its highest level, certainly in our country’s modern history,” Kenney told a news conference.

He said he doesn’t think Albertans really want to separate — they just want fairness, as their province contribute­s billions of dollars to the national economy.

Saskatchew­an Premier Scott Moe, who chaired the premiers’ meeting, has also said Ottawa’s energy policies, like Bill C-69 and its carbon tax, are a threat to national unity.

 ?? JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with workers at the Trans Mountain Terminal in Edmonton on Friday.
JASON FRANSON / THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks with workers at the Trans Mountain Terminal in Edmonton on Friday.

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