Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Former PM Mulroney Predicts Trump Rage At Justin Trudeau A Passing Storm

The Canadian Press, 12 Jun, 2018 12:25 PM
  • Former PM Mulroney Predicts Trump Rage At Justin Trudeau A Passing Storm
OTTAWA — Former prime minister Brian Mulroney predicts Donald Trump's unprecedented diatribe against Justin Trudeau is a passing storm.
 
 
Mulroney, who has a personal relationship with Trump and has been quietly advising the prime minister on how to deal with the mercurial U.S. president, likened Trump's weekend tirade to "serious summer squalls."
 
 
"They come upon you abruptly and they dissipate just as quickly," he said Monday.
 
 
"I think it's serious but because it's serious doesn't mean it's lethal."
 
 
Trump unleashed a Twitter harangue about Trudeau after departing the G7 summit in Quebec on Saturday, miffed that the Canadian prime minister had reiterated during a closing news conference that Canada intends to impose counter-tariffs on some American goods in retaliation for "insulting" tariffs imposed by Trump against Canadian steel and aluminum imports — which the president has justified on national security grounds.
 
 
Trudeau had been saying the same thing for several weeks, but Trump apparently found it reprehensible to repeat the message on the eve of his historic summit with North Korean dictator Kim Jong-un.
 
 
Trump called Trudeau "very dishonest and weak," among other things. And on Sunday, two of his top aides took to the talk show circuit to pile on.
 
 
Chief trade adviser Peter Navarro said there's "a special place in hell" for Trudeau and anyone else who negotiates in "bad faith" with Trump. And chief economic adviser Larry Kudlow accused Trudeau of betrayal and stabbing Trump in the back.
 
 
"I've never seen language like this, least of all from subordinates of the president directed at the prime minister of their greatest friend and ally," Mulroney said.
 
 
"This I've never seen before. Nor has anybody else."
 
 
Mulroney said he thought Trudeau's closing remarks were "fairly benign and certainly didn't warrant any attack."
 
 
"All Mr. Trudeau was doing, in a rather gentle way, was articulating the position of his government, which would be the position of any Canadian government in these circumstances," he said, adding that the counter-tariffs make sense.
 
 
"In this business, somebody puts a tariff on your products, you put a tariff on theirs. Now, how it's received on the other side is something else, but that's life."
 
 
Trudeau has so far not commented on Trump's tirade. Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland was measured Sunday, saying only that "Canada does not believe that ad hominem attacks are a particularly appropriate or useful way to conduct our relations with other countries."
 
 
Mulroney said the government is right not to trade insults with Trump.
 
 
"We shouldn't engage with these things. You can't win that kind of a contest."

MORE National ARTICLES

Bank Of Canada Keeps Key Interest Rate Target On Hold At 1.25 Per Cent

Bank Of Canada Keeps Key Interest Rate Target On Hold At 1.25 Per Cent
The Bank of Canada kept its key interest rate target on hold Wednesday, but hinted that rate hikes could be coming as it noted the Canadian economy was a little stronger than expected in the first quarter.

Bank Of Canada Keeps Key Interest Rate Target On Hold At 1.25 Per Cent

CTV Pulls 'Roseanne' From Its Television And Streaming Platforms

CTV Pulls 'Roseanne' From Its Television And Streaming Platforms
 CTV says it is pulling "Roseanne" from its television and streaming platforms following a racist tweet on Tuesday by the show's star Roseanne Barr.

CTV Pulls 'Roseanne' From Its Television And Streaming Platforms

New Bus Service In Northern B.C. Will Fill Gap Left By Greyhound Cutting Routes

New Bus Service In Northern B.C. Will Fill Gap Left By Greyhound Cutting Routes
VICTORIA — An interim long-haul bus service is being started in northern British Columbia by the province as Greyhound reduces and eliminates routes in the region.

New Bus Service In Northern B.C. Will Fill Gap Left By Greyhound Cutting Routes

Close Call: Saskatoon Man Hit In Face By Axe Flying Through Windshield

Close Call: Saskatoon Man Hit In Face By Axe Flying Through Windshield
 A Saskatoon man says he was cut on the forehead and suffered a concussion after an axe came flying through his truck's windshield.

Close Call: Saskatoon Man Hit In Face By Axe Flying Through Windshield

B.C. Electoral Reform Referendum Includes Two-Part Ballot Question

British Columbia's attorney general is recommending that voters be asked two questions in a referendum this fall to determine whether they want to switch to proportional representation to elect members of the legislature.

B.C. Electoral Reform Referendum Includes Two-Part Ballot Question

Grade 3 Student Dies In Clearwater, B.C., After Being Hit By Vehicle

Grade 3 Student Dies In Clearwater, B.C., After Being Hit By Vehicle
CLEARWATER, B.C. — Grief counsellors are at an elementary school in British Columbia's southern Interior to help students, staff and parents deal with the death of a Grade 3 youngster.

Grade 3 Student Dies In Clearwater, B.C., After Being Hit By Vehicle