Times Colonist

Trudeau vents frustratio­n as youth turn their backs in protest

- TERRY PEDWELL

OTTAWA — Dozens of delegates at a youth labour forum turned their backs Tuesday on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, using body language to express their frustratio­ns with everything from global warming to so-called precarious work.

As Trudeau began taking questions from two of the forum’s hosts, some delegates began to heckle and jeer while several rows of young people turned to face the back of the room, prompting harsh words from the prime minister himself.

Their actions sent the wrong signal to the other young people in the room, Trudeau told his detractors.

“It is a little bit frustratin­g for me to come in, sit down, look forward to hearing from you, talking with you, and seeing a room full of people who are standing in a way that shows they’re not listening,” he said.

“And I think it reflects poorly on everyone who does want to listen and engage.”

While Trudeau was applauded and cheered by some for defending himself, several delegates shouted back, calling the PM a “hypocrite” and holding signs reading “Keep the Promise.”

Many of the delegates were upset with the federal government’s support for the controvers­ial Trans Pacific Partnershi­p trade deal, as well as Finance Minister Bill Morneau’s recent comments about “job churn.”

This past weekend, Morneau told Liberal party insiders in Niagara Falls, Ont., that the government needs to prepare for high turnover and short-term contracts among youth because such jobs are here to stay.

“How do we train and retrain people as they move from job to job to job? Because it’s going to happen. We have to accept that,” Morneau said. The comments prompted cries of arrogance from the Conservati­ves and New Democrats, who accused the finance minister of lacking an understand­ing of Canada’s youth unemployme­nt problem.

Many young people at Tuesday’s forum, which was organized by the Canadian Labour Congress, voiced frustratio­n about their employment prospects, and booed as Trudeau also suggested that precarious work — including jobs with no pensions — is a fact of life.

“It’s simply unacceptab­le when the minister of finance is saying young people need to get used to precarity, young people need to get used to not having the same opportunit­y as other generation­s have had,” said Briana Broderick, a youth delegate representi­ng the United Steel Workers union. “This concept that we won’t have as much as other generation­s had, that’s really frustratin­g people.”

 ??  ?? Protesters turn in protest during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s speech at the Young Workers' Summit in Ottawa on Tuesday.
Protesters turn in protest during Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s speech at the Young Workers' Summit in Ottawa on Tuesday.

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