Canadians measured Trudeau and found him wanting
What can we add to the inevitable political obituary that could be considered good?
Author of the article:Warren Kinsella
Published Mar 08, 2025 • Last updated 17 hours ago • 4 minute read
Justin, we hardly knew ye.
Although, towards the end, the reverse was actually true, wasn’t it? We had gotten to know Justin Trudeau all too well. We had measured him, and we had found him wanting.
The indictments of Justin Pierre James Trudeau could be conjured up without a Google search: blackface, SNC-Lavalin, Aga Khan, WE, ArriveCan, election interference – and no balanced budgets, no reconciliation with Indigenous Canadians, no electoral reform.
It’s a long list.
This writer broke the story about one of the scandals: Gropegate.
In 2018, I published that Trudeau had been credibly accused of groping a female reporter at a B.C. beer festival many years earlier, and years before he became Prime Minister. The victim, whom I did not name, had disclosed that Trudeau had “groped” and “blatantly disrespected” her.
I had voted for Trudeau’s party in 2015. I had thought he was the change the country needed. But then the young woman revealed what Trudeau had said to her at the time: “I’m sorry, if I had known you were reporting for a national paper, I never would have been so forward.”
That was bad enough. But when my little scoop attracted unhelpful headlines around the world, Trudeau was confronted by the Canadian media.
He shrugged about what he did, and added another disclaimer for the ages: “This lesson that we are learning – and I’ll be blunt about it – often a man experiences an interaction as being benign, or not inappropriate, and a woman, particularly in a professional context can experience it differently.”
“Experience it differently?” When I heard that, from the self-professed feminist, that was it, for me.
When blackface broke the following year, it merely added to the conviction I (and others) already held – Justin Trudeau was ethically deficient. He was simply not who we thought he was.
He was (and is) just a man, of course. He has failings, like us all. But his response to the groping incident, and his acknowledgement that he had used racist blackface more times than he could remember? Those were a bridge too far, for me. I voted for the NDP in the next election, and Conservatives in the two after that. The fact that the people kept returning him to high public office was irrelevant. It did not cleanse him of his sins. It just spread the sins around.
So, now, we are days away from the end of the Justin Trudeau era. He is about to replaced by one of two men who are his polar opposite: a bland, boring banker who is genetically incapable of the melodramatic flourishes of Trudeau – or a morose, dyspeptic ideologue who keeps auditioning for the job he already has.
What can be salvaged, Justin? What can we add to the inevitable political obituary, in the few days that remain, that could be considered good?
Because there is good. There are achievements.
Trudeau halved child poverty in this country. His Canada Child Benefit was a positive thing. It helped to lift up to a million children out of poverty, and the hunger and desolation that always accompany it.
Trudeau kept the separatists at bay. In his decade in power, the Canada-wreckers could not resuscitate their destructive movement. Is that because Trudeau gave too much to the nationalists, or because Quebeckers trusted him more than the rest of us did? Historians will debate all that. The reality is that, under him, separatism became – and remains – a memory.
He had big political achievements, as well. He lifted his party from a distant third place to a historic Parliamentary majority. He effected a friendly acquisition of the New Democratic Party’s base, and still owns it. He beat three Conservatives in a row – including one, Stephen Harper, who was a giant.
And now, at the very end, Justin Trudeau is revealing glimpses of what we all thought we saw a decade ago: a fighter, a patriot, a believer in the undeniable greatness of this country.
On the morning that Donald Trump’s destructive tariffs landed, I tweeted out Trudeau’s own words: “The United States launched a trade war against Canada, its closest partner and ally, their closest friend. At the same time, they’re talking about working positively with Russia, appeasing Vladimir Putin: a lying, murderous dictator. Make that make sense.”
Those words were seen, and applauded, 2.2 million times. It was one of Justin Trudeau’s finest moments. A moment of courage and conviction.
It was sad, however, that we were only seeing that leader at the very end of his time at the top. It was what we had thought we all saw back at the beginning, wasn’t it?
When we knew him, and then we hardly knew him at all.
We have gotten to know Justin Trudeau all too well. We measured him, and we had found him wanting.
torontosun.com