The Hamilton Spectator

Democracy takes work, Trudeau says of U.S. ‘rioters’

Unrest at Capitol ‘assault on democracy,’ as PM blames trump

-

OTTAWA — Canadians and their elected leaders have a shared responsibi­lity to protect and defend the principles of democracy, which need constant tending to remain strong, Justin Trudeau said Friday.

It was only the prime minister’s latest repudiatio­n of this week’s stunning and deadly attack on Capitol Hill — a violent incursion that he blamed squarely on U.S. president Donald Trump.

In an opening statement during a news conference in Ottawa, Trudeau called Wednesday’s events an“assault on democracy” that was clearly incited by the sitting U.S. president.

“As shocking, deeply disturbing, and frankly saddening as that event remains, we have also seen this week that democracy is resilient in America, our closest ally and neighbour,” he said.

“Violence has no place in our societies, and extremists will not succeed in overruling the will of the people.”

He acknowledg­ed that Canada is “not immune” to the forces responsibl­e for the unrest in the U.S.

“We have a responsibi­lity as Canadians to continue to lead with respect, to engage substantia­lly with different points of view and to never resort to violence as a way of impacting public discourse,” he said.

“The choices we make as leaders, as politician­s, have consequenc­es. What we choose to say, what we choose not to say, how we choose to say it does have an impact on Canadians.”

Trudeau said he discussed the issue during his call Thursday with provincial and territoria­l premiers, reminding them that despite its strengths, preserving democracy takes work.

He called it an accomplish­ment to have and maintain a political system where the party that loses an election “gracefully concedes” and where rivals work together for everyone.

“We have this in Canada because Canadians make it possible,” he said.

“Canadians expect their political leaders to protect our precious democracy by how we conduct ourselves.”

They also expect elected leaders to engage in rigorous debate, that it be grounded in the facts, and that its enemies be identified and strongly repudiated.

“Canadian democracy didn’t happen by accident and won’t continue without effort,” Trudeau said.

“We must always work to secure our democracy, and not give comfort to those who promote things that are not true or give space for hate and extremism.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada