Ottawa Citizen

Reefer madness

Trudeau’s cannabis candour is a calculated risk

- JOAN BRYDEN

There is a method to Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau’s pot gambit,

There is method to Justin Trudeau’s reefer madness.

His willingnes­s to confess his past proclivity for puffing pot is part of a deliberate strategy to brand the Liberal leader as a different kind of politician — one who’s open and transparen­t to a fault, even when it might be more politic to dissemble.

It’s a calculated risk that could pay big dividends or blow up in his face, Liberal insiders acknowledg­e.

But he’s determined to make transparen­cy a trademark of his leadership.

His voluntary admission last week that he took a pull on a joint at a dinner party three years ago — while he was an MP — wasn’t the first example of Trudeau’s potentiall­y perilous frankness and it won’t be the last.

During the leadership contest that crowned him last spring, Trudeau voluntaril­y disclosed all his sources of income, including his inheritanc­e from his late father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, and more than $1 million earned on the public speaking circuit.

The fact that he continued to accept hefty speaking fees from charitable groups and educationa­l institutio­ns after being elected as an MP in 2008, sparked sufficient public backlash that he eventually offered to refund any group that felt it hadn’t got its money’s worth. In the end, none took him up on the offer.

As with the marijuana admission, the speaking fee controvers­y handed Conservati­ve and New Democrat rivals an opportunit­y to jab at what they consider Trudeau’s Achilles heel: his judgment, or lack thereof.

But Liberals are gambling that the appeal of Trudeau’s candour will outweigh any concerns about his behaviour. “It’s the type of leadership that (Canadians) have been waiting for,” Liberal House leader Dominic LeBlanc wrote last week in a blog on the party’s website as the pot controvers­y raged. “Rather than duck and dodge, our leader gave straight answers to tough questions.”

The commitment to transparen­cy isn’t going to be confined to the leader, however.

During a three-day caucus retreat in Prince Edward Island that begins Tuesday, Liberal MPs and senators are to be presented with a template for publicly disclosing their expenses online, starting this fall. That’s in keeping with a promise made by Trudeau last spring amid the uproar over the Senate expenses scandal and it could potentiall­y turn up some unwelcome surprises.

MPs will also be given a rundown on how the party intends to handle Trudeau’s pledge to hold open nomination­s in every riding across the country, forgoing the leader’s power to appoint candidates or protect incumbents from challenges — and risking some messy internal battles in the process.

And insiders say he’ll unveil yet more proposals later this fall for making politician­s more open and accountabl­e.

The emphasis on transparen­cy is aimed at contrastin­g Trudeau’s Liberals with what they claim are Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s ethically challenged, tightly scripted Conservati­ves.

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