The Miracle

Why should Justin trudeau be entering his last full year as PM? Because it’s 2022

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Dec 27: It’s a mid-life crisis like no other as -ustin Trudeau turns 50 with nowhere to go but down.The three-term prime minister and Christmas Day baby of 1971 faces a bleak Omicron beginning to his seventh year in power while confrontin­g a major personal decision: Stay or go"

But, but, but, you may say, that question was answered with Trudeau emphatical­ly insisting he will absolutely run again. Oh, puh-LEEZE. What leader would surrender power by even hinting at retirement just three months into a new mandate" Common sense says Trudeau sticking around not only tempts fate by going against traditiona­l three-strikes-andyou’re-out electoral math but risks the start of impatient grumbling from leader wannabes in his cabinet. And yet, it’s not easy to see a lucrative post-politics career for a youthful and healthy party leader who’s gone stale in the country’s top political job. He may ooze charisma and excel at spontaneou­s interactio­ns with the masses, but Trudeau tends to deliver plastic scripts through dead-eyed Teleprompt­er readings whenever he hits the podium for an official speech. Couple that with few signs of great intellectu­al depth and it seems unlikely Trudeau would be swamped by corporate board chair offers or sustain a prolonged world tour of $150,000-per-speech fees to blue-chip audiences. This is not to say -ustin Trudeau’s legacy is simply one of a drama teacher with a family-name birthright allowing him to coast through the job of prime minister. Now, before we move on, my top prediction for 2022 if Trudeauret­irement speculatio­n becomes a reality is that the next Liberal leader will be a woman who will indeed be elected prime minister if the Conservati­ves don’t somehow catch fire.

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She’s got the right stuff for the job and all, but Freeland’s public persona can be aggravatin­gly condescend­ing, her caucus relations aren’t much better than her reportedly cool and aloof treatment of her own top bureaucrat­s and she acts too much like her leadership victory is a fait accompli. For a more likely post-Trudeau leader look to current National Defence Minister Anita Anand, whose first cabinet job delivered spectacula­r success of procuring vaccines for all Canadians and who went on to deal more forcefully with the military sexual misconduct mess in a month than former minister Harjit Sajjan did in six years. The law professor is well liked by Liberal MPs, commands the meeting room when big decisions are made and is known to be quietly building links to the Liberal membership, whose votes will eventually crown the winner.

So I’ll limit my New

As for the Current One, well, if he makes tangible made-in-Canada progress toward withstandi­ng climate change, delivers meaningful Indigenous reconcilia­tion and puts the economy on a healthy track, -ustin Trudeau could bow out late next year as a transforma­tional prime minister who delivered far more than anyone expected when his sunny ways dawned in 2015.

But if he sticks around too long, weary voters will dropkick his poll numbers toward a probable election defeat and he could end his reign with a forced march out the door by his own Liberal MPs.

So why should Prime Minister -ustin Trudeau seriously consider leaving" Because it’s 2022. 7KDW¶V WKH ERWWRP OLQH Source: ctvnews.ca/

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