Regina Leader-Post

IN A SPEECH THAT TAKES VEILED SHOTS AT TRUDEAU, SCHEER AND HARPER, FORMER PM BRIAN MULRONEY IS CALLING FOR CANADA TO INCREASE ITS FOREIGN AID SPENDING AND RE-ENGAGE WITH THE UNITED NATIONS.

Former PM hits out at Trudeau, Scheer, Harper

- BRIAN PLATT bplatt@postmedia.com Twitter.com/btaplatt

OTTAWA • In a speech that takes veiled shots at Justin Trudeau, Andrew Scheer and Stephen Harper, former prime minister Brian Mulroney is calling for Canada to increase its foreign aid spending, re-engage with the United Nations, and stop telling the world “Canada is back” without taking action to back it up.

“The world stage is the big leagues, and if you want to play successful­ly there you have to conduct yourself that way,” Mulroney said in prepared remarks, shared with the National Post, for a speech at a United Nations Associatio­n in Canada (Una-canada) event on Thursday night in Toronto.

Mulroney opened the speech with a criticism of Harper’s Conservati­ve government over getting rejected for a UN Security Council seat in 2010, calling it embarrassi­ng. He said Canada had bid successful­ly for a Security Council seat six times before the rejection.

"(It) is not, as this embarrassi­ng rejection was characteri­zed by the then-government of Canada, ‘a badge of honour’,” Mulroney said. “Stridency, disruption, and bellicose — but ultimately meaningles­s — hollow threats are not synonymous with principle and never lead to successful outcomes.”

Mulroney went on to say Trudeau hasn’t done enough to restore Canada’s image. “For all the self-congratula­tory talk that ‘Canada is back,’ the world has taken note that the rhetoric has not been matched by action,” he said. “If we want to dress the rhetorical ‘Canada is back’ up in appropriat­e clothing, we must begin by gaining the respect of allies by paying our own way.”

From there, Mulroney laid out his ideas for rebuilding Canada’s internatio­nal credibilit­y. He started with a call to drasticall­y increase Canada’s “anemic and embarrassi­ng” foreign aid spending — the exact opposite of what Scheer’s Conservati­ves promised in the last election campaign, when they proposed to cut foreign aid spending by 25 per cent.

“(Former prime minister) Mike Pearson set the target for industrial­ized nations to commit 0.7 per cent of GDP to foreign aid,” Mulroney said. “My government raised our contributi­on to 0.5 per cent en route to the objective. Then for 25 years, it has been all downhill.”

It marks the second time this week that Mulroney has given a speech that appears to criticize Scheer’s approach to the last campaign. Earlier, accepting an environmen­tal leadership award, he urged Canadian politician­s to take much bigger action on climate change even if it’s unpopular with “the base.” Two of Mulroney’s children — Caroline and Mark — have been occasional­ly floated as potential federal Conservati­ve leadership candidates.

Mulroney’s other prescripti­ons for increasing Canada’s clout were to increase defence spending and take a lead role in UN peacekeepi­ng missions.

He cited former Liberal cabinet minister John Manley, who said in 2008 — while leading an independen­t panel studying Canada’s mission in Afghanista­n — that Canada too often leaves for the bathroom when the bill arrives at an internatio­nal meeting.

“This has unfortunat­ely over time become accurate, but it is a pathetic manner for a great nation to seek or assert ambitions of internatio­nal leadership,” Mulroney told the Una-canada, whose mission is to promote the work of the UN. “It assumes that our allies and opponents cannot read or count — but believe me, they can do both.”

Mulroney won back-toback majority government­s in 1984 and 1988 as leader of the Progressiv­e Conservati­ves. He said his government wasn’t perfect, but “in complex areas of internatio­nal relations, my government quickly learned how to operate in order to produce strong beneficial results for Canada.”

“We led the worldwide effort to feed the starving of Ethiopia and played a major role in the liberation of Nelson Mandela, and working in the G7, the Francophon­ie, the Commonweal­th and in the United Nations, we saw the end of the reprehensi­ble system of apartheid,” he said. He also said Canada argued successful­ly for a UN authorizat­ion of force in response to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in 1990, and noted a Canadian had been president of the UN Security Council at the time.

He ended his speech with an appeal for more support for the UN in an age where the U.S.’S leadership on the world stage is on the decline.

“We now live in a world where the events of the moment signal unrelentin­g pressures of instabilit­y, where the U.S. inclinatio­n and capacity to assert global leadership is on the wane, and where the principles of multilater­alism so helpful for the last half of the last century are now under assault,” he said.

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Brian Mulroney

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