Philippine Daily Inquirer

TRUDEAU FACES DIVIDED CANADA

- —AFP

MONTREAL —A controvers­ial pipeline, reinvigora­ted Quebec nationalis­m and a growing rift with western prairie provinces: voters gave Justin Trudeau a second term in office but with a weakened minority government that will face immediate challenges.

The Liberals’s nationaliz­ation last year of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project to prevent its collapse under legal challenges and protests has been panned by the eco-friendly wing of the party that sees it as contrary to efforts to curb carbon dioxide emissions.

Canada’s oil sector is the fourth largest in the world, but has struggled under low prices and a lack of oil conduits to new markets. And oil proponents say Trans Mountain, purchased by Ottawa for Can$4.5 billion, will greatly help ease transporta­tion clots.

In order to stay in office, Trudeau will need to form alliances with smaller parties such as the New Democrats (NDP), but they have come out strongly opposed to the project, putting its future in doubt.

“On Trans Mountain, perhaps both sides will have to put water in their wine,” said Mcgill University politics professor Daniel Beland.

Trudeau must navigate how to “get along with the NDP without taking his centrist party too far to the left.” Beland noted that the Liberals have governed for much of the past 152 years since Confederat­ion “because it is a party that is pragmatic, flexible.”

A nation deeply divided

Monday night, the Liberal’s small beachhead in the western prairie provinces of Alberta and Saskatchew­an was completely wiped out, with Conservati­ves claiming all 48 seats but one in Edmonton that went to the NDP.

The Conservati­ve premiers of these two provinces are openly hostile to Trudeau and his climate policies and his win on Monday has led to talk of landlocked Alberta splitting from the rest of Canada to go it alone.

“It will be difficult to put together a cabinet without any representa­tion from Alberta,” an oil-rich province that’s the fourth most populous in the nation, Beland said.

“The Liberals are going to have to work with the NDP, which means they will have to track to the left” and take an even tougher stance on the oil sector to accommodat­e the NDP, he said.

“That’s not good news for Albertans and people in Saskatchew­an who are already unhappy with Trudeau’s carbon tax.” Cancelling the Trans Mountain expansion to appease the NDP “would create a huge backlash in these two provinces” and exacerbate regional tensions, he said.

 ?? —AFP ?? FRESH TERM Prime Minister Justin Trudeau celebrates with his wife Sophie after winning a second term.
—AFP FRESH TERM Prime Minister Justin Trudeau celebrates with his wife Sophie after winning a second term.

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