Those who are remotely familiar with the Trudeau family have always known that Justin Trudeau takes more after his mother than his father. Like Margaret, he is charming, sociable, warm and emotional, but even though he had a close relationship with his father, he didn’t inherit Pierre Elliott
This is why the infatuation of so many anglophone Liberals with Justin Trudeau has always been incomprehensible on this side of the Ottawa River. From the day the photogenic eldest
Now, though, after the recent outburst of Trudeau fils – who essentially told the CBC that he’d rather embrace Quebec separatism than live in a Canada dominated by the “Harperites” – the Liberals have probably come down to Earth and realize that this young man is more of a liability than a future leader.
Here is a Canadian who’s ready to renounce his citizenship and accept the breakup of the country because he doesn’t like the government of the day? What would happen if he didn’t like the policies of the future government of a separate Quebec? Would he emigrate back to Canada?
The sovereigntists greeted this declaration with glee.
This, of course, ignores the fact that most Canadians outside Quebec didn’t vote for the Conservatives
By demonizing the Harper government (he even suspects it wants to ban abortions and gay marriage!),
This tirade was also politically silly, since the Liberal Party will need many of these voters if it wants to regain some of its lost territory. And it was just plain nasty, since it smacked of contempt for the political culture of the West and it confirmed the worst prejudices against “rednecks.”
There’s something else. When he said that he wouldn’t recognize (his) Canada in a Harper-led country, Mr. Trudeau was indeed the inheritor of a long line of Liberals, those who used to see their party as Canada’s “natural governing party.”
I remember the horror with which Liberal stalwarts reacted when the Brian Mulroney’s Conservatives took power in 1984.
