Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Criticized For Tweet To Trevor Noah Pledging $50M Charity Gift

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Dec, 2018 12:54 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada will contribute $50 million to a global charity for children's education, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau tweeted to comedian Trevor Noah, a pledge that quickly drew criticism both for its content and its form.
     
     
    Celebrities gathered in Johannesburg, South Africa on Sunday for the Global Citizen Festival: Mandela 100, a charity concert honouring Nelson Mandela a century after he was born.
     
     
    Trudeau tweeted to Noah, who is hosting the festival, that Canada would give the money to Education Cannot Wait, an organization that funds education for children affected by conflicts, natural disasters and other crises.
     
     
    Global Citizen is an organization that wants to end extreme poverty by 2030. Its Mandela 100 campaign sought to bring in US$1 billion in donations, and Global Citizen tweeted that the campaign surpassed that goal, bringing in over $7 billion.
     
     
    "Hey @Trevornoah - thanks for everything you’re doing to celebrate Nelson Mandela’s legacy at the @GlblCtzn festival. Sorry I can’t be with you - but how about Canada pledges $50M to @EduCannotWait to support education for women & girls around the world? Work for you? Let’s do it," Trudeau tweeted to the South African comedian and "The Daily Show" host.
     
     
    Noah said "This is amazing!" as Trudeau’s tweet was shown on a big screen at the concert.
     
     
    But back in Canada critics were less enthusiastic. Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer accused Trudeau of pledging $50 million in a tweet to impress a TV personality.
     
     
    "Taxpayers need a defender not somebody who throws their money around to be popular with celebrities," Scheer tweeted.
     
     
    Similarly, Conservative MP Michelle Rempel tweeted that Trudeau's message was "tone deaf" and also accused him of trying to get noticed by a TV star and said the money had not been budgeted for.
     
     
    Louis Belanger, the director of communications for International Development Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau, said the $50 million is part of $400 million in aid previously announced during the G7 Summit in Charlevoix, Que., near Quebec City, in June.
     
     
    Belanger said Education Cannot Wait is one of the only funds that specifically helps girls' education in places such as refugee camps and war zones.
     
     
    "This is the type of funding that we had our eye on since we announced it in Quebec City," he said.
     
     
    Belanger said the decision to announce the $50 million was made three weeks ago but officials had been talking about giving to Education Cannot Wait for months.
     
     
    He said the organization operates in Jordan, Lebanon and South Sudan and in camps where people have been displaced by the west African terrorist group Boko Haram, for example.
     
     
    "We think it's important for girls to continue their education and that's why we're moving forward," he said.
     
     
    Trudeau's principal secretary Gerald Butts took to Twitter to defend the move.
     
     
    "This money is going to educate women and girls in the developing world, in commemoration of Nelson Mandela’s 100th birthday," he tweeted, adding, "And the Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada’s reaction..." and included a link to Scheer's tweet.
     
     
    Toronto-based lawyer and former Liberal staffer Warren Kinsella tweeted that Education Cannot Wait is a worthy cause, but called Trudeau's tweet an "appalling" way for the decision to be communicated, "to a American-based TV host, no less."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'A Giant Step Forward': New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond To Enter Circulation

    'A Giant Step Forward': New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond To Enter Circulation
    Wanda Robson still finds it hard to believe that her big sister is the new face of the $10 bill — and the first Canadian woman to be featured on a regularly circulating banknote.

    'A Giant Step Forward': New $10 Bill Featuring Viola Desmond To Enter Circulation

    Canadian Dead More Than A Week After Plane Crash In Guyana: Global Affairs

    A Canadian citizen who was aboard a plane that crashed through a fence at Guyana's main international airport has died, the federal government said Sunday as it extended its condolences to the person's family.

    Canadian Dead More Than A Week After Plane Crash In Guyana: Global Affairs

    Police Confirm Six Students Arrested, Charged In St. Michael's Probe

    TORONTO — Six teens were arrested and charged Monday in connection with an alleged sexual assault at an all-boys private school in Toronto as police said they were looking into more incidents and additional charges could follow.

    Police Confirm Six Students Arrested, Charged In St. Michael's Probe

    Sophisticated Phishing Scams Putting Secrets At Risk, Foreign Affairs Says

    Sophisticated Phishing Scams Putting Secrets At Risk, Foreign Affairs Says
    OTTAWA — Canada's Foreign Affairs Department says too many of its employees are being deceived by digital scams — a "serious problem" that could see sensitive information end up in the wrong hands.

    Sophisticated Phishing Scams Putting Secrets At Risk, Foreign Affairs Says

    B.C. Holds Vote For Favourite Fossil After Museum Gets 18,000 Donated

    B.C. Holds Vote For Favourite Fossil After Museum Gets 18,000 Donated
    COURTENAY, B.C. — British Columbians who haven't yet marked their ballots in a referendum on electoral reform could distract themselves a little longer by voting for an official fossil symbol for the province.

    B.C. Holds Vote For Favourite Fossil After Museum Gets 18,000 Donated

    Grassroots Video Rants And Braveheart Spoofs Engage B.C. Referendum Voters

    VICTORIA — Homemade videos by a Vancouver filmmaker featuring scenes of his toddler's escapades and shots of a friend's Pomeranian named Nacho are fast becoming the indie hit of British Columbia's electoral reform referendum.

    Grassroots Video Rants And Braveheart Spoofs Engage B.C. Referendum Voters