The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

PM vulnerable as election nears

Trudeau promised to reset relations with Indigenous peoples in 2015

- STEVE SCHERER

OTTAWA — The discovery of hundreds of graves of Indigenous children, highlighti­ng Canada’s mistreatme­nt of First Nations, has dominated campaignin­g ahead of a likely election and is an issue on which Liberal Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is vulnerable, analysts and indigenous advocates say.

In 2015, Trudeau promised to reset relations between the government and Indigenous peoples, a point he re-asserted in a 2017 speech to the United Nations, but his government’s own 2019 inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women and girls has been widely criticized for leading to little change.

Liberal sources say a snap election is likely as soon as September as Trudeau, 49, seeks a majority after being forced to depend on opposition parties to pass legislatio­n since 2019.

For the first time since the pandemic began, Trudeau traveled to make in-person policy announceme­nts around the country last week. Two of his rivals, Conservati­ve leader Erin O’toole and progressiv­e New Democrat Jagmeet Singh, also hit the road.

Canada has been rocked by the disclosure­s of more than 1,000 unmarked graves of Indigenous children were discovered at former “residentia­l schools,” church-run institutio­ns funded by the government. The system forcibly separated the children from their families, subjecting them to abuse, in what the country’s Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission (TRC) called “cultural genocide” in 2015.

Almost 70 per cent of Canadians said they had been unaware of the severity of abuses in the residentia­l school system until the graves were found, according to an Abacus Data survey published in June. According to the same poll, 72 per cent of Canadians now support moving faster to redress the legacy of the schools.

Kathleen Mahoney, a human rights lawyer and one of the architects of the TRC, said the discovery was “an existentia­l crisis for ordinary non- Indigenous Canadians, about who are we and what is our Canadian identity.”

NO ‘MEANINGFUL PROGRESS’

Before his first election victory in 2015, Trudeau promised to address all 94 recommenda­tions — or “calls to action” — set out by the TRC report but has so far covered only eight, according to the Yellowhead Institute, a First Nation-led think tank. Six recommenda­tions were about finding, identifyin­g and commemorat­ing children who died at the schools.

“Had the government really done their job, then we really would not be here today looking at this six years later,” said Lynne Groulx, Chief Executive Officer of the Native Women’s Associatio­n of Canada.

Trudeau also promised to end all boil water advisories in Indigenous communitie­s by 2020. Fifty-one advisories are still in effect in 32 communitie­s, while 108 have been lifted since 2015, according to official data.

“There hasn’t been any meaningful progress on their watch” on Indigenous, said Frank Graves, president of polling company EKOS Research, leaving Trudeau “somewhat exposed” politicall­y.

The government’s shortcomin­gs could benefit the left-leaning New Democrats, Graves said, who accuse the Liberals of not doing enough.

The Liberals would win 38.1 per cent of the vote if it were held now, a Nanos Research poll from July 2 shows. That puts them in majority territory for now, with Conservati­ves trailing at 23.6 per cent and New Democrats at 20.4 per cent.

Trudeau responded to a question about his government’s failure to address the TRC’S recommenda­tions at a news conference in Quebec, saying: “What took generation­s and indeed centuries to break... is going to take more than just a few years to fix.”

Some 80 Indigenous of the TRC recommenda­tions that require government action are “completed or well underway,” a spokespers­on for the Canadian minister of Crown-Indigenous Relations said.

In a joint statement, the two ministers in charge of indigenous affairs and services said the latest budget includes “historic, new investment of over C$18 billion” over five years for Indigenous communitie­s.

Last week, Trudeau made a stop at the Cowessess First Nation in Saskatchew­an, where graves were found, to sign an agreement two years in the making that allows Cowessess to take charge of its own child welfare system.

Earlier the same day, he made the historic appointmen­t of Mary Simon, an Inuk woman, as the first indigenous governor general, who serves as Canada’s representa­tive to head of state, Queen Elizabeth.

“We all inherited this. But we are all somewhat responsibl­e to make it right,” Cowessess Chief Cadmus Delorme said in a telephone interview.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lays a teddy bear at a small flag in a field prior to a ceremony at the site of a former residentia­l school where, last month, ground-penetratin­g radar detected a potential 751 unmarked graves, in Cowessess First Nation, Sask., on July 6.
REUTERS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau lays a teddy bear at a small flag in a field prior to a ceremony at the site of a former residentia­l school where, last month, ground-penetratin­g radar detected a potential 751 unmarked graves, in Cowessess First Nation, Sask., on July 6.

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