Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Five Things You Should Know About Gerald Butts, Following His Resignation

The Canadian Press, 19 Feb, 2019 02:39 AM

    OTTAWA — Gerald Butts resigned Monday as the principal secretary to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau amid allegations former justice minister Jody Wilson-Raybould was pressured by the Prime Minister's Office not to proceed with a criminal prosecution of Quebec-based engineering firm SNC-Lavalin.


    Here are five things to know about who he is and what his role has been.


    Founded in friendship

    Butts and Trudeau are not just colleagues, they are very close friends. They met at McGill University in the early 1990s and their friendship was so close that Butts helped craft Trudeau's memorable eulogy for his father, former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, in 2000.


    That was the public speech that produced a push for Trudeau, then a teacher in British Columbia, to follow his father into politics. In his book, Common Ground, Trudeau wrote that when he began to think about running for the Liberal leadership in 2012, Butts was the first person he approached for advice.


    Butts was a critical part of both Trudeau's leadership campaign and the Liberals' 2015 election campaign. Trudeau has described Butts and Katie Telford, his chief of staff, as "the core of my inner circle."

     


    From different worlds, united

    Butts and Trudeau were both born in 1971 but grew up in very different circles. Trudeau was the son of a prime minister whose childhood included a security detail and handshakes with world leaders.


    Butts was the youngest son of a Glace Bay, N.S., coal miner and a nurse, who nonetheless grew up to have at least one link to Liberal politics. His aunt, Peggy Butts, a nun and social activist who is said to have been one of the biggest influences on how he views the world, was appointed to the Senate by Jean Chretien in 1997.



    Deja-vu all over again

    The 2015 campaign was not the first in which Butts helped steer a Liberal leader into government. Butts's first foray into politics came with the Ontario Liberals, where he was a policy adviser to then-leader Dalton McGuinty. He was one of the architects of the 2003 Liberal platform that propelled McGuinty into the premier's office and Butts would be his principal secretary for five years.

    McGuinty's agenda has many similarities to Trudeau's, such as phasing out coal power, expanding renewable energy, and increasing social spending.

     

    Prime Minister Butts

    Butts has been unusually visible for a senior political staffer. He did not shy away from talking to journalists — in fact he seemed to relish doing so — but always "on background." His presence on social media, however, was public and constant, as he used Twitter to spin government policy, challenge government critics and even get into sparring matches with the leaders of provincial parties and governments.


    This visibility began in his McGuinty days, with the Ontario Tories in 2003 putting out an entire press release attacking him as an "anonymous, unelected, backroom spin doctor" who was the "real leader of the Liberal Party of Ontario."


    This visibility, and his influence and power within Trudeau's office, were not always met happily by Liberal MPs, some of whom secretly referred to him as "PM Butts."



    It's the environment, stupid

    Butts's influence is felt in every area of government policy and Trudeau would not make any big policy decisions without the input of both Butts and Telford. But the area Butts holds dearest is the environment.


    Environment policies were a central theme in McGuinty's government during the Butts era, and again with the Trudeau Liberals. In between the two governments, Butts was the CEO of the World Wildlife Fund in Canada, a position he held until the Trudeau Liberal leadership campaign came calling.


    In his resignation statement Butts even made a pitch for action to halt climate change: "Our kids and grandkids will judge us on one issue above all others," he said. "That issue is climate change. I hope the response to it becomes the collective, non-partisan, urgent effort that science clearly says is required. I hope that happens soon."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Man Seriously Injured In Suspected Targeted Shooting In Burnaby, B.C.

    Man Seriously Injured In Suspected Targeted Shooting In Burnaby, B.C.
    Investigators says officers dispatched to the corner of Smith Avenue and Price Street last night found a 39-year-old man who'd been shot.

    Man Seriously Injured In Suspected Targeted Shooting In Burnaby, B.C.

    Surrey, B.C., Woman, 22, Injured Using Cellphone While Crossing Busy Street

    Distracted walking may have played a part in an incident in Surrey, B.C., that sent a pedestrian to hospital with head injuries.  

    Surrey, B.C., Woman, 22, Injured Using Cellphone While Crossing Busy Street

    Newfoundland Town Gripped By Mysterious Billboards That Declare Love For 'Sonia'

    Amateur Sleuths Trying To Determine The Identities Behind The Public Declaration Of Love

    Newfoundland Town Gripped By Mysterious Billboards That Declare Love For 'Sonia'

    Three CP Rail Workers Dead Following Train Derailment Near Field, B.C.

    Three CP Rail Workers Dead Following Train Derailment Near Field, B.C.
    Three crew members of a Canadian Pacific freight train have died in a derailment near the Alberta-British Columbia boundary.

    Three CP Rail Workers Dead Following Train Derailment Near Field, B.C.

    Police Identify Victim In Fatal Surrey Shooting As 30-Yr-Old Bikramjit Khakh

    Police in Surrey, B.C., are investigating the shooting of a 30-year-old man, who they believe was targeted.

    Police Identify Victim In Fatal Surrey Shooting As 30-Yr-Old Bikramjit Khakh

    NDP Byelection Victory Prompts Soul-Searching Among Greens, Liberals In B.C.

    The Nanaimo byelection had the potential to tip the balance of power in the legislature, as the NDP have 41 seats and govern with the support of three Green members.

    NDP Byelection Victory Prompts Soul-Searching Among Greens, Liberals In B.C.