Toronto Star

Poilievre ‘will do anything to win,’ PM warns

- ALEX BALLINGALL

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau intensifie­d his criticism of Conservati­ve Leader Pierre Poilievre on Wednesday, when he linked his main challenger for power with an American conspiracy theorist who infamously spread lies about the mass murder of schoolchil­dren.

Trudeau delivered the broadside at a news conference in Oakville, after he was asked about a video circulatin­g online in which Poilievre is shown telling people at an anti-carbon price demonstrat­ion — where the symbol of a group that police have linked with ideologica­l extremism is briefly shown on a trailer door — that everything the prime minister says is “bulls--t.”

In his answer, Trudeau alluded to how disgraced American conspiracy theorist Alex Jones has endorsed Poilievre as the “real deal” — something the Liberal party seized upon in recent online attack ads against Poilievre.

But Trudeau went further Wednesday in highlighti­ng Jones’s controvers­ial falsehoods about the 2012 Sandy Hook shooting, when a gunman killed 26 people, most of them young children, at an elementary school in Connecticu­t. In 2022, Jones was ordered to pay more than $1 billion in damages to the victims’ families after they sued him for defamation.

“Every politician has to make choices about what kind of leader they want to be,” Trudeau said Wednesday. “Are they the kind of leader that is going to exacerbate divisions, fear and polarizati­on in our country, make personal attacks and welcome the support of conspiracy theorists and extremists? Because that’s exactly what Pierre Poilievre continues to do.”

He added Poilievre “refuses to condemn and reject the endorsemen­t of Alex Jones. Alex Jones is a proven liar and conspiracy theorist who has to pay hundreds of millions of dollars because he lied about the Sandy Hook killing that killed 20 little kids. This is the kind of man who’s saying Pierre Poilievre has the right ideas.”

This shows, “he will do anything to win, anything to torque up negativity and fear,” Trudeau claimed.

Asked why the Conservati­ve leader has not denounced or rejected Jones’s expression of support, Poilievre’s spokespers­on Sebastian Skamski said by email that the Conservati­ves “do not follow” or listen to Jones, and that the party is only working for the endorsemen­t of “hard-working, everyday Canadians.

“Unlike Justin Trudeau, we’re not paying attention to what some American is saying,” he wrote.

His statement also said that, “if Justin Trudeau is concerned about extremism, he should look at parades on Canadian streets openly celebratin­g Hamas’s slaughter of Jews on Oct. 7.”

That was an apparent reference to controvers­ial demonstrat­ions over the ongoing war in Gaza, including a recent one on Parliament Hill that sparked a police probe, in which a man on a megaphone was recorded praising the Hamas massacre of Israeli civilians that killed more than 1,200 people. During the ensuing war, Israel has killed more than 34,000 Palestinia­ns in the Gaza Strip, according to local health officials.

In his email, Skamski said the video circulatin­g online was made when Poilievre was travelling in Atlantic Canada and “noticed an anticarbon tax protest” on the side of the highway. The Conservati­ve leader made the “impromptu” decision to stop and speak with the people there, Skamski said.

The video also showed a “F-k Trudeau” flag at the demonstrat­ion, as well as an image of what appeared to be the Diagolon flag — the symbol of an online group

that the Ontario Provincial Police deemed to be an “ideologica­l group” that uses rhetoric encouragin­g “government collapse.”

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