Toronto Star

Trudeau urged to use caution as campaign violence heats up

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D AND MAAN ALHMIDI

OTTAWA—The time has come for Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau to start taking the protests dogging his campaign a little more seriously, a security expert and a member of an antihate group say.

While they don’t think the threat has reached the level where he needs an Americanst­yle secret service bubble to protect him, they say the rising displays of anger dictate that he takes more precaution­s.

Trudeau’s campaign has been repeatedly stalked by vocal groups of protesters — he has called them “anti-vaxxermobs” — that have shouted racist and misogynist slurs at his security detail while hurling obscenitie­s and, in some cases, death threats at the Liberal leader.

The seriousnes­s of the disruption­s escalated noticeably on Monday when dozens of protesters, some carrying signs criticizin­g COVID-19 vaccines and lockdowns, surrounded Trudeau’s campaign bus in London, Ont., and threw a handful of gravel at him.

The RCMP declined to comment on what extra precaution­s they might be talking, beyond saying they constantly review their safety measures.

But a retired RCMP officer who served in the protection details of former prime ministers says Trudeau needs to reconsider the political gain of doing such events, because the next time he could face something more dangerous than gravel.

“Next time, maybe it’ll be something harder, or pointier or hotter, and these things have a tendency to ramp up, particular­ly when you’re dealing with people now who are under this long-term stress of having been locked up due to COVID,” says Chris Mathers, the founder of an internatio­nal security consultanc­y.

“We all have friends that we thought were normal, and we see now that they’re perhaps not so much. And these are the kinds of people that are coming out.”

Mathers’s previous protection assignment­s included serving on the security detail of Brian Mulroney in the 1980s when the then-prime minister sparked angry protests by showing friendship to U.S. president Ronald Reagan. Mathers was in the Quebec City hotel when the two leaders sang “When Irish Eyes Are Smiling” as angry protesters slammed metal barricades outside.

Mathers dismisses some pundits who have opined that Canada needs to adopt a harder security line akin to the U.S. Secret Service.

He says comparing the protection requiremen­ts of an American president to a Canadian prime minister is “apples to oranges.”

Mathers says he knows his ex-colleagues are taking the threats extremely seriously today and are dealing with a client — Trudeau — who is also heeding their advice quite closely.

“My friends who protect the PM did say one thing about him — he always stays in the box, which is in the square of bodyguards, unlike some of the other prime ministers,” Mathers says.

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