Toronto Star

Old-fashioned whupping on a trash-talking foe

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Then they sat in disbelief as their Big Blue Hope crumpled under the onslaught from the Liberal they love to hate.

The two men squared off in the most anticipate­d political event — that did not include voters — in recent memory.

Trudeau, who was taught to box as a boy by his famous father, was striving for the first significan­t Liberal victory of any kind since 2004.

Brazeau, a former aboriginal leader appointed to the Senate in 2009, had become more intense and more focused on a knockout, as the fight approached.

But this was really a dream for any Canadian who wanted to see a politician get hit in the head, in a ring, where parliament­ary immunity is unknown, no Speaker can shut you down and you can’t turn and run from a hostile media scrum.

It was the ultimate result of every partisan dust-up ever threatened in the stately House of Commons where shouted slurs are common and physical challenges are sometimes tossed in anger.

Federal Conservati­ve cabinet ministers were sprinkled throughout the room of 780, where single tickets went for $250 and a ringside table cost $3,000.

Conservati­ves make little secret of their disdain for the Papineau MP with the famous name.

They blame him for directing a huge amount of traffic, via his Twitter account, to details of Public Safety Minister Vic Toews’ divorce and his obscenity shouted at Environmen­t Minister Peter Kent late last year.

Trudeau is flamboyant, to put it charitably.

But he does raise money, whether it was during the Movember moustache campaign for prostate cancer, or his charity striptease at a Canadian Liver Foundation event, “What a Girl Wants,’’ in Ottawa, which raised $128,000 last November.

He also mused about the acceptance of Quebec separatism if the country continued down the Conservati­ve path, then backed off his position at a bizarre encounter with Ottawa journalist­s in which he spoke exclusivel­y in the third person.

Brazeau, the country’s youngest senator, an Algonquin from Maniwaki, Que., was appointed in January 2009, and arrived in a blaze of controvers­y, at first stating he would continue to draw his sixfigure salary as chief of the Congress of Aboriginal Peoples at the same time he was drawing his six-figure Senate salary. He subsequent­ly resigned from the aboriginal organizati­on. Both men had personal reasons for the bout. Brazeau’s mother died of lung cancer and he was with her at her bedside. Trudeau’s father, the former prime minister, died from prostate cancer. Over the last four years, the annual Fight for the Cure event in Ottawa has raised money for cancer research, including more than $125,000 in last year’s exhibition. For all the tweeted tut-tuts from the more faint of heart, it cannot be forgotten that because of the profile of this year’s combatants, organizers believe they could raise more than $200,000. A similar event, the Fight to End Cancer, is set for the Woodbine Racetrack on June 9. Tim Harper is a national affairs writer. His column usually appears Monday, Wednesday and Friday.

 ?? CHRIS WATTIE/REUTERS ?? Justin Trudeau gets a victory kiss from his wife, Sophie Gregoire, after defeating Conservati­ve Senator Patrick Brazeau in their rather one-sided charity boxing match in Ottawa.
CHRIS WATTIE/REUTERS Justin Trudeau gets a victory kiss from his wife, Sophie Gregoire, after defeating Conservati­ve Senator Patrick Brazeau in their rather one-sided charity boxing match in Ottawa.
 ?? TIM HARPER ??
TIM HARPER

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