Toronto Star

Show us you’re ‘high-value’: PM

Trudeau says Bombardier must make a strong case for funding

- TERRY PEDWELL THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA— If Montreal-based aerospace manufactur­er Bombardier Inc. needs federal money to aid its CSeries jet project, it’ll have to make a “strong business case,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a meeting of labour leaders Tuesday.

He was responding to questions at a closed-door Canadian Labour Congress (CLC) gathering in Ottawa — the first time a sitting prime minister has addressed the country’s biggest labour body in more than 50 years.

He told the CLC’s Canadian council that his government won’t prop up a business on the basis of emotion or politics, sources inside the room disclosed.

Trudeau did, however, characteri­ze Bombardier as a high-value manufactur­er in the same league as the auto sector, which received government money to help it get through the 2008 recession.

“There’s no question that high-value manufactur­ing is going to be an extremely important part of Canada for years to come. Aerospace is a great example of that, as is the auto sector and others,” Trudeau told the gathering.

“How we can best invest and support that kind of manufactur­ing needs to be done responsibl­y and with our eyes open, and not just based on emotion or politics or symbols,” he said. “There has to be a strong business case. We’re going to make sure that decision . . . is in the best interest of Canadians, writ large.” The Quebec government said last month it would invest $1 billion in the CSeries in return for a near 50-per-cent stake in the project. Since then, the province has been lobbying Ottawa to match that amount. The project has saddled the firm with debt, forcing it into a struggle to raise cash in order to keep it afloat.

Transport Minister Marc Garneau, who represents a Quebec constituen­cy, has said Bombardier has not formally approached the government about possible federal aid.

Trudeau’s comments about Bombardier came as no surprise, said CLC presi- dent Hassan Yussuff. “I think Bombardier’s got a good, strong argument regarding the business case,” Yussuff said after the prime minister spoke.

The last time a prime minister appeared in front of the Canadian Labour Congress was when John Diefenbake­r spoke at the organizati­on’s 1958 convention.

Trudeau was loudly applauded when he told Tuesday’s meeting of more than 120 labour leaders his government will fulfil the Liberal campaign promise to repeal Bills C-377 and C-525 — the former Conservati­ve government’s anti-union legislatio­n. Trudeau said he recognizes that “labour is not a problem, but a solution.”

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Quebec wants Ottawa to match its $1-billion investment in Bombardier.
NATHAN DENETTE/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO Quebec wants Ottawa to match its $1-billion investment in Bombardier.

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