Windsor Star

Open Eyes

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This editorial from the Creston Valley Advance in 2000, reprinted to accompany an NP1 story about an 18-year-old groping allegation against Justin Trudeau in Saturday’s edition of the Windsor Star, appeared in a grey box and couldn’t be read by some of our readers.

OPEN EYES

“I’m sorry. If I had known you were reporting for a national paper, I never would have been so forward.”

Those were the words that were spoken to an Advance reporter by Justin Trudeau, son of former prime minister Pierre Trudeau, Aug. 4.

Trudeau, who was in Creston to celebrate the Kokanee Summit festival put on by the Columbia Brewery, apologized — a day late — for inappropri­ately “handling ” the reporter while she was on assignment, not only for the Advance, but also for the National Post and Vancouver Sun.

“If I had known you were reporting for a national paper ...”

It’s not a rare incident to have a young reporter, especially a female who is working for a small community newspaper, be considered an underling to their “more predominan­t” associates and blatantly disrespect­ed because of it. But shouldn’t the son of a former prime minister be aware of the rights and wrongs that go along with public socializin­g? Didn’t he learn, through his vast experience­s in public life, that groping a strange young woman isn’t in the handbook of proper etiquette, regardless of who she is, what her business is or where they are? And what makes the fact that she was working for the Post of any relevance? Big stories break first in community papers after all. It may not have been an earthshatt­ering find, but one thing could have been learned from the experience.

Like father, like son?

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