By: Chelsea Kemp, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Brandon Sun
The Progressive Conservative leadership race yielded surprising results, said Brandon University political scientist Kelly Saunders, given how close the final tallies were for each candidate.
Heather Stefanson received 8,405 votes, defeating rival Shelly Glover, who garnered 8,042 votes.
The Tuxedo MLA, a former cabinet minister and deputy premier, was selected to lead the PCs by party members in a mail-in vote.
As of Sunday night, Glover had not conceded the leadership race and may yet challenge the result.
“There were a number of quite troubling allegations just about the fairness of the process,” Saunders said. “Certainly, the closeness of the votes might have lent some credence to some of those concerns.”
Saunders said a close majority does lend credence to concerns regarding ballots not being sent out to members in advance of the vote, ballots being missing or ballots being received too late to mail back in time for Saturday’s vote. She added she has also heard concerns regional voter drop boxes scattered across the province did not exist or required people to drive many kilometres to visit.
Given the seriousness of these allegations and concerns, she said, it is understandable Glover has not yet conceded the leadership race.
The controversy surrounding the leadership race colours the naming of the province’s first woman premier, she said, because the outcome needs to be seen as legitimate in the eyes of party members and the eyes of Manitobans.
“This is more than just the new leader of a party, obviously — this is a vote for our new premier,” Saunders said. “In order for that outcome to be seen as legitimate the process has to be seen as legitimate — if the process is seen as questionable or dubious in some aspects, then there is going to be some question marks hanging over the premier-elect Stefanson’s head, and that is unfortunate because this is such a historic moment.”
Having the first female premier is a cause for celebration in terms of gender equity, equality and seeing more diverse faces in politics, she said, making the occasion an important one for the province. Unfortunately, these important milestones and markers will likely be overshadowed by the questions of legitimacy.
Saunders added Stefanson’s first days as premier will be further complicated because she remains the leader of the same caucus and cabinet that remained silent during former premier Brian Pallister’s decisions regarding the handling of the COVID-19 pandemic and his “disturbing” comments regarding Indigenous issues including residential schools and Reconciliation.
“These are the same people that threw the support behind Stefanson in a very public way,” Saunders said.
She is now leading a party that in the view of many Manitobans is still a continuation of Pallister’s cabinet and caucus. Stefanson will need to try to separate herself, the cabinet and caucus from his legacy — a challenging task to overcome.
She added these necessities will be further fuelled because of the ideological and urban-rural divide facing the PCs, which has been exacerbated by the leadership race.
Glover had significant support from those in the party who are right of centre and/or rural and the divisions have been intensified by the closeness of the race.
Stefanson will now need to bring the party on her side to support her leadership.
“She has a number of really key challenges ahead of her, and it’s not going to be an easy path forward,” Saunders said.
Social scientists often talk about the “glass cliff” when they look at women in leadership positions, whether it is in politics or other sectors. The idea is centred on a political party, government or any organization that is suffering in the polls or potentially recovering from a crisis trying to shake things up by bringing in a woman to rebrand.
However, that woman is often given a herculean task to rebuild a suffering organization or is not provided with the resources or tools needed to create systemic change.
“She’s almost set up to fail, and then when she does she’s pushed over the edge of the cliff and everyone says, ‘well, that’s what happens when you put a woman in charge — she’s doomed to fail,’” Saunders said. “It really does cast a pall over other women wanting to follow in those footsteps and really breaking through that glass ceiling because they’re not given the same equal opportunities to succeed when they’re in those positions as leadership.”
She hopes Stefanson will be allowed to prove herself as a successful and capable leader, but going into the role with the questions surrounding her path to victory is a troubling way to begin a new premiership.
It remains an exciting time for the province because there are two years before the next election — a long stretch in political time.
The PC Party is beginning to rebound, rising about six points in popular support across the province based on polls, Saunders said, although they are still significantly behind the NDP.
The party is in a good position with 20,000 new members brought in as a result of the leadership vote. Saunders said if they can hold onto these people in terms of volunteers and fundraising, it puts the party in a better position heading into the next election.
She noted as an urbanite and woman leader Stefanson might be able to close the PC gap with urban and woman voters over the next two years.
“There’s always a honeymoon period when a new leader is elected,” Saunders said. “If they’re able to see a bump in the polls as a result of a new shiny face on the party and a different face on the party in the form of a woman and they can hold to that or at least use that momentum to lead them into the next election, the party is in a better position certainly more than it was six months ago.”
Year: 2021
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First Female Premier Faces Uphill Battle
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U.S. sending an ambassador to Canada — finally
Canada is about to have a U.S. ambassador again. It’s only taken more than two years. But a logjam broke Tuesday evening in the U.S. Senate, as David Cohen’s appointment was allowed to proceed.The Philadelphia telecom exec will head to Ottawa after the Senate agreed unanimously to approve his appointment in a voice vote.
The development came amid flared tempers between Democrats and Republicans in the chamber over the alleged systematic blocking of President Joe Biden’s diplomatic appointments.
On Tuesday evening, Democrats read out a list of names they hoped to confirm by unanimous consent, including ambassadors to Israel, NATO and Canada.
In the U.S., ambassadorial nominations require approval by the Senate, and Democrat Robert Menendez criticized his opponents for slow-walking scores of nominees; he mentioned Canada as one example.
How does [blocking] the ambassador to Canada actually advance U.S. interests? It does not. It is seriously detrimental to our national security,
he said.
Republican Sen. Josh Hawley then proceeded to block unanimous consent for a series of nominees, saying in some cases he was acting on his own behalf and in others on behalf of colleagues who had objections.
He said these nominations deserved a full debate and votes — like the NATO appointment, to get a better sense of how the Biden administration intends to press allies to meet military spending commitments.
Hawley criticized Democrats for going to the Glasgow climate summit instead of staying in the chamber to have full debates on nominations.
Top Senate Democrat Chuck Schumer ridiculed the idea that blocking so many nominations in any way served the American national interest.
The consequence? Scores of empty desks in the State Department, in our embassies, in our Department of Treasury and other agencies,
Schumer said.
These nominees are not controversial. They’re routinely confirmed by consent in this chamber, until a few people decided that they wanted to make a big show of this. For whatever reason. No one ever did this before.
After that exchange, Hawley kept blocking consent for nominees.
Then when Cohen’s name came up something unusual happened: Nobody raised their voice to object, and the Senate recorded the new diplomat as being confirmed as heading to Ottawa.
The U.S. hasn’t had an official ambassador at its Ottawa embassy since the departure of Kelly Craft in early 2019, when she was appointed by Donald Trump to represent the U.S. at the United Nations.
At his recent confirmation hearing, Cohen was asked about Canada’s China strategy and he said the Biden administration looked forward to seeing one.
He arrives in Ottawa amid unresolved tensions over energy issues, with uncertainty over the Line 5 oil pipeline, and trade: Ottawa has registered deep displeasure with a Buy American-style policy on electric vehicles.
Alexander Panetta · CBC News -
Pandemic does not have a set end date
By: Bird Bouchard, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Ridgetown Independent News
There is no set end date for the pandemic being over.
Last week, the Ontario government announced that all COVID-19 restrictions could potentially end by the end of March, including vaccine passports and masks if everything goes well.
While many are excited over the announcement, Chatham-Kent’s Medical Officer of Health, Dr. David Colby, admitted he is concerned people will interpret the provincial announcement as a trajectory towards the end of this pandemic early in the new year. He is stressing the fact this is a possibility and not a likelihood.
“I think a lot of members of the public are getting the idea that it (pandemic) will end in January or March to the dates that have been mentioned,” said Colby. “It is contingent upon everything settling down by that time.”
Colby said there’s a constant assessment that needs to be done in order to evaluate the situation correctly. He added the pandemic is not over, and we will be living with the virus beyond March.
According to the region’s top doctor, even if the province lifts mandatory mask-wearing and proof of vaccination, the municipality and the health unit have the power to keep them in place if the local numbers deem it necessary.
Colby reminded the public of the fact the municipality has a bylaw requiring masks to be worn indoors. This bylaw would have to be rescinded along with the provincial rules in order for masking to come to an end within Chatham-Kent.
In fact, Colby said there’s no guarantee the public safety measures will be lifted in the new year.
He said the pandemic has been unpredictable, highlighting that nobody could have anticipated the Delta virus arriving.
“If the delta virus had not arisen and become the predominant strain, and we were dealing with the original COVID strain that circulated, we would have enough herd immunity now to be done with it. We cannot predict what’s going to happen in the future.,” said Colby.
The region’s top doctor admitted he is worried the province’s announcement will lead to unvaccinated people holding out as they now have an “end date” in mind of how long they have to hold out before restrictions are lifted.
“So if people are hanging their hats and saying, ‘I’ve only got to hold out for another couple of months, and I won’t have to get vaccinated,’ I would ask them what they are holding out for, with a 36 times greater chance of dying from being unvaccinated,” said Colby.
Mayor Darrin Canniff said the municipal mask bylaw would be discussed at the next council meeting.
According to Don Shropshire, Chatham-Kent’s Chief Administrative Officer, because Chatham-Kent’s vaccination rates are still some of the lowest in the province, he still wants to promote vaccinations.
He added he would hate to get to a point where the rest of the province is opening up, and Chatham-Kent still requires wearing masks or maintaining regulations.
“I don’t think we should be doing anything with any of our regulations that in any way is going to restrict what’s required to do to keep our community safe,” he said.
As of Oct. 27, the number of active cases in Chatham-Kent sits at 59.
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Cost of dairy products could spike in Canada next year
The Canadian Dairy Commission is recommending an 8.4 per cent increase in farm gate milk prices, a large hike that is expected to raise the cost of dairy products on store shelves in the new year.The federal Crown corporation says the price increase is expected to be approved by provincial authorities next month and take effect Feb. 1.
The commission says the higher price processors will pay will help offset increased production costs for farmers due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
It says feed, energy and fertilizer costs have all been particularly impacted, causing farmer revenues to fall below the cost of production.
Sylvain Charlebois, director of the Agri-Food Analytics Lab at Dalhousie University, says the price hike is nearly double the previous record of 4.52 per cent set in 2017.
He says the retail price of milk in grocery stores could increase as much as 10 per cent while prices for dairy products like butter, cheese and yogurt could soar as much as 15 per cent.
The Canadian Press -
Milton Marks Carbon Monoxide Awareness Week 2021
By: Laura Steiner
This week is Carbon Monoxide (CO) Awareness week, running from today (November 1) until November 7.
Carbon Monoxide is a substance produced when fuels including propane, gasoline, natural gas, heating oil or wood don’t completely burn. The fuels are used in appliances including:- Furnaces
- Hot water heaters
- Gas/Wood fireplaces or stoves
- Heaters/generators,
- Barbeques
- Vehicles
The Milton Fire Department has shared the following tips:
- Inspect fuel-burning appliances, chimneys and vents on a yearly basis
- Use barbecues only outside
- Install CO Alarms adjacent to each sleeping area
- Check heaters are properly vented
- Never run vehicles or motors inside a garage even if the door is open, and remove vehicles from the garage once they are started
How Do I know what a CO alarm sounds like?
- Test both smoke, and CO alarms on a monthly basis in order be sure your home’s occupants know the difference between them, and how they sound.
- Consult the manufacturers’ instructions as to what the difference is between the warnings for end-of-life and low-battery.
What are the symptoms of CO?
- Carbon Monoxide exposure can cause symptoms mimicking the flu such as headaches, nausea, dizziness, drowsiness, loss of consciousness and death.
- If the CO alarm goes, and the home’s occupants are suffering from CO exposure, leave the house immediately.
- Check the battery if the alarm sounds, and none of the occupants are showing symptoms of exposure.
For more tips visit the Milton Fire Department’s website, and COsafety.ca
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Trudeau says climate progress made at G20 — but Canada wanted more ambitious plan
Canada wanted a stronger and more ambitious agreement on climate change to emerge from the G20 summit — but leaders still managed to make progress by committing to address some key issues, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Sunday.His remarks came as he wrapped up two days in Rome at the G20 leaders’ summit, where the leaders’ final communiqué saw them agree for the first time in writing that limiting the increase in average global temperatures to 1.5 C above pre-industrial levels would be better for everyone.
But the document also watered down numerous parts of a previous draft version, including replacing specific deadlines to hit net zero carbon emissions by 2050 and eliminate coal power by the end of the 2030s, with net zero bymid century
and eliminating coal poweras soon as possible.
Language promising to reduce methane emissions was changed only to recognize that curbing methane is a cost-effective and relatively easy way to reduce emissions.
There’s no question that Canada and a number of other countries would have liked stronger language and stronger commitments on the fight against climate change than others,
Trudeau said at his closing news conference.
But we did make significant progress on recognizing 1.5 degrees is the ambition we need to share.
A quarter of the G20 leaders skipped the weekend’s events, including Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin, and Trudeau suggested that affected the language on coal and net zero emissions.
These are the kinds of things that Canada’s going to continue to push for, alongside all our colleagues,
Trudeau said. “Not everyone around the table was there today and we’re a group that works on consensus as much as possible.
But we’re going to continue fighting for a better future for all.
China, which is in absolute terms the world’s biggest emitter, is still very dependent on coal for electricity, as is India. Both have expressed an inability to reduce coal power at this point; China has also only set a goal to achieve net zero emissions by 2060, rather than 2050.
Italian Prime Minister Mario Draghi, the G20 summit host, made a last-ditch effort on Sunday to urge the leaders of the world’s biggest economies to accept the reality of the situation.
We face a simple choice,
he told leaders at the table.We can act now or regret it later.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson was more grim when asked about the results of the G20 summit.
If we don’t act now, the [2015] Paris Agreement will be looked at in the future not as the moment humanity opened its eyes to the problem, but the moment we flinched and looked away,
Johnson said.
The U.K. leader further cranked up the stakes for the conference a UN climate conference starting in Scotland:If Glasgow fails, then the whole thing fails.
Push for financing a priority
A key part of the COP26 conference is a push for developed countries to commit to climate financing to help developing countries address climate change. Canada and Germany had been tasked with securing the goal of $100 billion US per year — but that goal won’t be met until 2023.
In an interview on Rosemary Barton Live on Sunday, Canada’s new natural resources minister, Jonathan Wilkinson — who previously served as environment minister — said the report that he and his German counterpart put together hadmoved the ball forward significantly
but that there was more to do.
Beyond 2025, we’re all going to have to do more, there’s no question about that. And that conversation will begin at COP26,
he told CBC chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton. Wilkinson also noted that the world would need to also mobilize private dollars to help with climate action.
Most of the G20 leaders, including Trudeau, are headed to Glasgow directly from Rome for two days of negotiations to finally finish crafting rules for how the Paris climate agreement will measure progress and run carbon-emissions trading markets.
The hope had been for strong language from the G20 as motivation for COP26, when all of the parties to the Paris Agreement will be represented in some fashion.
Trudeau said COP26 will keep putting pressure on governments to do more to slow global warming, even though the same leaders missing in Rome are expected to skip Glasgow too.
It is a challenging process to shift the trajectory of the world off of fossil fuels and onto more renewables and reduce our carbon emissions,
he said.But it is hard work that is being done by people here today, by people in Scotland, by people all around the world, that we are committed to as a G20 and as a world.
Trudeau also said just having the G20 talks was progress.
Any time the leaders of the world are able to gather, particularly after this pandemic year, once again in person, and actually get into it together and talk about this existential threat to all of us that is climate change is itself a win,
he said.
The Canadian Press with files from CBC News, Reuters and The Associated Press
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Newcomer loves socializing, helping fellow immigrants overcome their challenges
By: Dariya Baiguzhiyeva, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, TimminsToday.com
Bincy Kurian’s motto in life is to stay patient and confident.
Kurian, 29, works as a welcoming communities co-ordinator at the Timmins and District Multicultural Centre.
“If we’re patient and working for something, we can achieve it,” she says.
Kurian is from Kerala, a state located in southwestern India. Back there, she studied nursing and worked in a neural surgery department. She worked there for 1.5 years before coming to Canada.
“We’re helping someone attain their health. We’re helping them to cure, giving care to them. Once they’re cured of a disease, we feel so great,” she says.
With her passion for helping people, she wanted to get into counselling or a mental health-related field. In 2017, she moved to Timmins for the social service worker program at Northern College.
Her first impression of Timmins was that it was small, calm and peaceful. Kurian’s landlord, who lived in the same house, was a nice Canadian woman who was helpful and made her feel at home.
“It was so nice. I felt like it’s my home. I didn’t feel that much homesick when I was with her,” she recalls. “After one year, I moved out when my husband came.”
Her husband Jerin Edwin now works as a chef at Cedar Meadows Resort. A year after he joined Kiruan in Timmins, they welcomed a son to their family.
Kurian had an arranged marriage. She says she liked him when she first met him. May 18, 2017, they got engaged and four days later, they got married.
Kurian says she will teach her son both languages, English and Malayalam.
“We try to speak both languages. If my parents say something to him, he will understand. And he’s here, he’s a Canadian, so he needs to learn English, too,” she says. “He needs to learn both languages. He needs to know our culture, too.”
In Timmins, the community of people from Kerala comprises about 50 people. They celebrate the traditional Onam festival, Christmas and Easter. With more people coming to study here, Kurian estimates the community will grow.
In August, the community celebrated Onam festival. Following safety protocols, they rented a hall, did traditional dance, laid flower decorations on the floor and made over 20 food items served on a plastic banana leaf. Women wore a white sari, while men wore a white dhoti.
“We didn’t celebrate within a large group back home, we didn’t meet in groups. Here in Canada, we’re celebrating all together, all the community together, it’s so nice,” she says. “We’re meeting new people and the community is getting bigger.”
When Kurian first arrived in Timmins, there weren’t many people from south India.
“Before I came here, I Googled and I inquired. I got one family’s name and we contacted each other. By 2018, 10 people also came in Timmins, so we made a WhatsApp group,” Kurian says. “Whoever else is coming, we’re adding them to the WhatsApp group.”
In Timmins, Kurian, who’s Catholic, attends St. Anthony Padua and Paroisse Notre-Dame De La Paix every week. Kurian says she’s always been religious as it plays a big role in her life. In her youth, she was engaged with church groups and activities.
After her social work diploma, she tried to enrol in a university. Because she wasn’t a permanent resident and tuition was expensive, she decided to be patient and wait. Now, as a permanent resident, she can study at a cheaper rate.
Kurian worked at the Anti-Hunger Coalition as a community engagement internship worker. After six months, she left and started working at the multicultural centre.
Socializing and helping immigrants overcome their challenges is what she likes about her job.
“As I’m an immigrant, I know the challenges and what they’re suffering, so it’s easier to convey a message, find the resources and help them,” she says.
“There will be struggles when you come for the first time but if you have the mind to adjust, we’ll overcome it,” she says. “Everyone has the mindset to be hardworking.”
Kurian says she’s has encountered racism and discrimination in the city and she’s still struggling with it. There are a lot of newcomers coming to Timmins, she says, but so many are moving out, too.
“There are people who are helping but there are some people who aren’t helping. That’s the biggest (challenge),” she says. “It’s hurting me emotionally, my family … We came here, we paid a lot of money, we came here not to make any issues. But they’re saying we came to their country.”
In the future, Kurian wants to pursue social work and if possible, obtain a master’s degree. She also wants to travel.
“Dream for the best, and we’ll get something,” she says. -
Seniors 80 years and older should get COVID-19 booster shots, NACI recommends
Canada’s National Advisory Committee on Immunization (NACI) is recommending COVID-19 booster shots for all adults 80 years of age and older, and is also opening the door for certain other groups who may be at increased risk of lowered protection over time since their initial vaccinations.Populations at highest risk of waning protection following their primary series and at highest risk of severe COVID-19 illness should be offered a booster dose of an mRNA COVID-19 vaccine at least six months after completing their primary series,
NACI’s new guidance released Friday said, (new window) noting that seniors 80 years and oldershould
be offered a booster shot.
NACI also said other peoplemay
be offered a booster shot, because theymay be at increased risk of lower protection over time since vaccination, increased risk of severe illness or who are essential for maintaining health system capacity.
Those groups include:- Adults between the ages of 70 and 79.
- People who received two doses of the AstraZeneca/COVISHIELD vaccine or one dose of the Janssen vaccine.
- Adults in or from First Nations, Inuit and Métis communities.
- Adults who are front-line health-care workers who have direct in-person contact with patients and who were vaccinated with a very short interval between their first and second doses (three or four weeks).
Booster shots should be given at least six months after the second dose of vaccine, NACI said. The boosters should also be one of the mRNA vaccines — Pfizer-BioNTech or Moderna, it said.
NACI has already recommended third doses for people living in long-term care home sor other congregate settings, as well as people with specific immunocompromising conditions
In its guidance on Friday, the advisory group said it continues tostrongly recommend
that people who are moderately to severely immunocompromised should get a third dose of vaccine. People in that category include:- Active treatment for solid tumour or blood cancers.
- Organ transplant recipients taking immunosuppressive therapy.
- People getting chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T-cell therapy or hematopoietic stem cell transplant (within two years of transplantation or taking immunosuppression therapy).
- Moderate to severe primary immunodeficiency (e.g. DiGeorge syndrome, Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome).
- Stage 3 or advanced untreated HIV infection and those with AIDS.
- Active treatment with certain immunosuppressive therapies.
What’s the difference between a booster shot and a 3rd dose?
The three approved COVID-19 vaccines in Canada (Pfizer-BioNTech, Moderna and AstraZeneca) are all two-dose regimens. A third dose is for people who may not have mounted a strong enough immune response to fight off COVID-19 after two doses.
NACI has identified two populations that require third doses: elderly people living in long-term care and those who have specific health conditions that make them immunocompromised (including organ transplant recipients). For these people, a third dose is an extension of their primary series of vaccinations.
A booster shot is for people who likely had a fulsome immune response to the regular two-dose vaccine regimen, butwith time, the immunity and clinical protection has fallen below a rate deemed sufficient in that population,
according to the World Health Organization (WHO) .
It’s comparable to the tetanus vaccine, which requires a booster shot every 10 years. Most experts agree that everyone will likely need a COVID-19 booster shot at some point within the next year, but the big question is when.
Nicole Ireland · CBC News
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Trudeau says Canada and Netherlands must join forces again to fight ’extremism,’ climate threat
Speaking in the Hague’s Binnenhof with dozens of Dutch parliamentarians in attendance, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called Friday for a new era of partnership between Canada and the Netherlands as they both grapple with a “more unpredictable world.”Citing Canada’s liberation of the Netherlands from Nazi rule during the Second World War, Trudeau said the two allies are uniquely qualified to work together to tackle some common challenges: rising online extremism, inequality and the existential threat of climate change.
If our two countries are bound together, and I know that we are, it is not only by our shared history. It is by our common future,
Trudeau said in his 20-minute address, delivered in the 13th century Ridderzaal, a former castle that is used for official visits like this and the annual state opening of parliament.
As friends, allies and partners across the Atlantic, Canada and the Netherlands share a commitment to the brighter tomorrow we want to see, and the progressive values that will get us there.
Trudeau specifically identified conspiracy theorists, intolerance andmarginalized angry people online,
as urgent issues for the Western world that demand a robust response from like-minded countries.
We are not on the front lines of a world war as our grandparents were. That does not mean, though, that we can sit back and just assume the work they started is done. My friends, our work is just beginning,
he said.
My friends, we have faith that what we do today will have an impact tomorrow because if we sow the seeds of a brighter future, that better day will arrive. That’s what Canadian soldiers believed when they landed on the beaches of Europe 80 years ago. It’s what they believed as they fought their way to the Netherlands.
PM honours war dead at ceremony
Trudeau had planned to be in Europe for the 75th anniversary of the Dutch liberation but COVID-19 derailed those ceremonies. More than 7,500 Canadian men and women died while freeing the Netherlands from Nazi rule in late 1944 and early 1945, before Germany’s surrender.
To mark Canada’s considerable military sacrifices, Trudeau travelled with Princess Margriet — a member of the Dutch royal family who was born in Ottawa while in exile during the Second World War — to lay a wreath at the Bergen op Zoom Canadian war cemetery in the country’s south.
Princess Juliana — who later reigned as Queen of the Netherlands from 1948 to 1980 — went with her family into exile in Canada during the Nazi occupation of their country during the war, staying at the Stornoway residence in Ottawa.
Juliana gave birth to Margriet at the Ottawa Civic Hospital in 1943 and Canada temporarily ceded its claim to that territory to ensure the young princess was born a Dutch national. The diplomatic gesture ensured Margriet would not be kept out of the line of succession to the throne.
Trudeau and Margriet, accompanied by a bagpiper who played the Last Post, took part in a small ceremony Friday at a cenotaph in Bergen op Zoom, a site that contains 1,118 war dead. The two then visited three different grave sites where a guide recounted stories about each of the soldiers’ wartime experiences.
In his speech to MPs, Trudeau invoked the war, saying Canada and the Netherlands must summon the sort of strength they showed during that military conflict to address rising global temperatures.
As climate change threatens our world, aren’t we once again called to step up and defend a bright tomorrow for our children?
Trudeau said.Climate change is the test of our generation.
Trudeau is scheduled to meet with Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte later today to discuss bilateral issues and the upcoming G20 meeting in Rome and COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, events where the push to tackle rising greenhouse gas emissions will feature prominently.
Trudeau and Rutte — who leads the centrist People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy — are ideologically aligned and have been at the forefront of convincing climate laggards to do more to help turn back rising global temperatures.Trudeau pressed on Canada’s emissions targets
While at the Binnenhof, Trudeau took questions from some of the Dutch MPs gathered for his speech. He was challenged by Jesse Klaver, the leader of the Green-Left Party, to explain why Canada’s greenhouse gas emissions-reduction targets are less than what the European Union has pitched. If Canada is so serious about climate, why doesn’t its level of ambition match its European allies, Klaver asked.
Trudeau said the fight against climate change can’t be defined by targets alone; they must also be matched by a realistic plan to shift the economy to cleaner energy sources. Canada, as a major oil and gas producer, cannot be easily compared to a country like the Netherlands that extracts comparatively fewer fossil fuels, Trudeau said.
So much of the energy is around setting the targets rather than digging into actually having a concrete plan or roadmap to get there,
Trudeau said.
At an international climate summit in April, Trudeau promised Canada will reduce emissions by 40 to 45 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030 — which would cut total emissions much more than the target first pitched by the former Conservative government and agreed to by former environment minister Catherine McKenna at the Paris climate talks in 2015.
One of the commitments I made at Paris six years ago, even as Canada was stepping up in its climate leadership, was that we would not move forward in announcing targets until we had a real and concrete plan to meet them and that’s what we’ve been working on over the last number of years,
Trudeau said to Klaver, who bears a striking resemblance to the Canadian prime minister.
Trudeau said Friday Canada isdemonstrably on track to meet 36 per cent below the 2005 targets,
and will push to go even further at it hastens the transition away from fossil fuels.
When he finished answering Klaver’s question, Trudeau quipped,Nice hair,
an apparent reference to the MP’s similar hairstyle.
The prime minister was also pressed by Raymond de Roon, a member of the Party of Freedom, a right-wing populist party, to explain Canada’s position on China, a country the MP identified as a threat to the Western world.
Trudeau assured the MP that Canada is similarly concerned about China’s influence.
Canada continues to have very real concerns around China and human rights, whether it’s the situation with the Uyghurs, the situation with Hong Kong or the South China Sea,
Trudeau said, adding he was grateful the Dutch exerted diplomatic pressure on China to free Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig.
China poses challenges to democracies around the world,
Trudeau said.
John Paul Tasker · CBC News -
Trudeau departs for high-stakes talks in Europe on climate change, pandemic
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau leaves today for Europe, where he will participate in high-stakes talks with other world leaders about pressing issues like climate change and the race to vaccinate people in low- and middle-income countries.While much of the nearly week-long trip will be dominated by the G20 meeting in Rome and the subsequent 26thconference of the parties
(COP26) climate summit in Glasgow, Trudeau has carved out time for an official visit to the Netherlands, a country with close historic and diplomatic ties to Canada.
A government official, speaking on background to reporters at a briefing ahead of the trip, said Trudeau was invited by Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte toreally deepen the ties between our two countries, which are already very deep.
Rutte made a trip to Canada in 2018 and Trudeau isreturning the invitation,
the official said.
The two countries are closely aligned on foreign policy matters, the official said, pointing to ongoing cooperation on the climate file as the two nations push other developed countries to do more to help turn back rising global temperatures.
In an interview with CBC News, Ontario Independent Sen. Peter Boehm, a former G7 sherpa , said Rutte and Trudeau can use the diplomatic face time to discuss how best to approach the Rome summit.
The G20 countries alone represent 80 per cent of the global economy and the bulk of annual greenhouse gas emissions. That makes the Rome summit — coming just before COP26, where the position of G20 nations will be critical — especially important.
A meeting of the G20 environment ministers arrived at an impasse earlier this year when it failed to reach an agreement on priorities like phasing out coal and limiting global warming to 1.5 C. Multiple countries, including China, India, Russia and Saudi Arabia, balked at some of the proposed language.
Canada and the Netherlands could help broker a pragmatic solution through creativewordsmithing,
Boehm said.
It’s a friendly, easy relationship and I would say, since the prime minister is on that side of the Atlantic anyway, renewing that friendship is entirely appropriate in terms of the way these things go,
Boehm said, noting that Trudeau and Rutte — who leads the centrist People’s Party for Freedom and Democracy — are ideologically aligned.
They’ll discuss bilateral issues, global concerns and they will compare notes on COP going into Glasgow.
During a stop in the Hague, the diplomatic capital of the Netherlands, Trudeau is expected to deliver an address to parliamentarians at the Binnenhof. He’s then scheduled to travel with Princess Margriet — a member of the Dutch royal family who was born in Ottawa while in exile during the Second World War — to lay a wreath at the Bergen op Zoom Canadian war cemetery in the country’s south.7,500 Canadian soldiers died during liberation of the Netherlands
The Canadian-Dutch relationship is undeniably defined by the two countries’ shared experience during that bloody conflict. More than 7,500 Canadian men and women died while liberating the Netherlands from Nazi rule in late 1944 and early 1945, before Germany’s surrender.
We are forever grateful to those brave Canadian soldiers who carried the light of freedom to our country in its darkest hour,
Rutte said during his 2018 address to the Canadian Parliament.This, we will never forget.
Geoffrey Hayes is a professor of history at the University of Waterloo and an expert on the First Canadian Army’s liberation of the Netherlands. A frequent visitor to the country, Hayes said he’s always struck by the respect Dutch civilians show to the former Canadian soldiers who helped free that country after a brutal eight-month-long military campaign.
I remember, in the 1990s, at the 50th anniversary of the liberation, Canadians were invited over and it was just overwhelming to see the Dutch villagers who were swarming these old Canadian veterans. They were like rock stars. It really was something. The reception was quite extraordinary,
Hayes told CBC News.
They appreciate the Canadian involvement in a way that most Canadians just don’t understand. A lot of guys got killed in eight to 10 months of the war and it’s something that the Dutch recognize about the Canadian position.
While helping the Dutch secure their freedom, the Canadian victories also helped to shore up crucial supply lines to Allied armies as they continued their push toward Germany.
We often suggest that the war was over by early ’45 but it certainly wasn’t in the towns and villages of the Netherlands that were liberated by the Canadians,
Hayes said.It’s one of the overlooked elements of the war. We weren’t charging towards Berlin and weren’t rushing to occupy Germany.
Geoffrey Hayes is a professor of history at the University of Waterloo and an expert on the First Canadian Army’s liberation of the Netherlands. A frequent visitor to the country, Hayes said he’s always struck by the respect Dutch civilians show to the former Canadian soldiers who helped free that country after a brutal eight-month-long military campaign.
I remember, in the 1990s, at the 50th anniversary of the liberation, Canadians were invited over and it was just overwhelming to see the Dutch villagers who were swarming these old Canadian veterans. They were like rock stars. It really was something. The reception was quite extraordinary,
Hayes told CBC News.
They appreciate the Canadian involvement in a way that most Canadians just don’t understand. A lot of guys got killed in eight to 10 months of the war and it’s something that the Dutch recognize about the Canadian position.
While helping the Dutch secure their freedom, the Canadian victories also helped to shore up crucial supply lines to Allied armies as they continued their push toward Germany.
We often suggest that the war was over by early ’45 but it certainly wasn’t in the towns and villages of the Netherlands that were liberated by the Canadians,
Hayes said.It’s one of the overlooked elements of the war. We weren’t charging towards Berlin and weren’t rushing to occupy Germany.
The Dutch royal family is really quite unpretentious. They were part of the scene in Ottawa, they were seen freely walking around with their children — that was obviously appreciated,
Hayes said, noting that the Netherlands still sends Ottawa roughly 10,000 tulip bulbs each year to repay the kindness shown by Canadians at a time of crisis.
Those kinds of links are in the far distant past but they’re important. There are really strong links now between Canada and the Dutch because of all this.
John Paul Tasker · CBC News