Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Invited 44 People, Including Mom, To Accompany Him To Washington

The Canadian Press, 06 May, 2016 10:43 AM
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau took a small army of 44 people with him for a three-day visit to Washington last March, at a cost of more than $25,000.
     
    The size and preliminary cost of the delegation invited to accompany the prime minister on his first visit to the U.S. capital has been disclosed in a document tabled in the House of Commons.
     
    It's not clear whether the delegation included one of two taxpayer-funded nannies employed by Trudeau and his wife, Sophie Gregoire-Trudeau, to help look after their three young children.
     
    The kids accompanied their parents on the trip and were filmed playing on the White House lawn, with a nanny at one point chasing after the youngest, Hadrien.
     
    A separate document also tabled in the Commons shows that two caregivers, employed as part of the staff at the prime minister's residence, were paid a combined salary of $30,850 over the first three months of Trudeau's term in the top job.
     
    That does not include the cost of foreign or domestic travel for either of the nannies, one of whom was spotted during a prime ministerial trip to Paris last year.
     
    A spokesman for the Prime Minister's Office said such travel costs for the nannies would come out of the Global Affairs Department's "international conference allotment."
     
     
    The two documents were tabled Thursday in response to written questions by Conservative MP Blaine Calkins about the cost and size of the Washington delegation and the cost of employing the nannies.
     
    Trudeau's much ballyhooed Washington visit included a private tete-a-tete with President Barack Obama and a lavish, glamorous state dinner at the White House.
     
    Among those who appeared with Trudeau were at least nine cabinet ministers; five of his top PMO aides; his mother, Margaret Trudeau; Gregoire-Trudeau's parents; top bureaucrat Michael Wernick; Liberal party president Anna Gainey; and chief Liberal fundraiser Stephen Bronfman.
     
    It's not clear whom the government counted as part of the 44-member delegation cited in the document. The Liberal party said late Thursday that Gainey and Bronfman's expenses for the trip to Washington were not on the public dime.
     
    The document pegs the total cost for all 44 persons on the trip at $25,995, including $6,755 for accommodations and $5,000 for meals and per diems. But it notes that not all invoices and claims for that trip have yet been processed.
     
    The document on the nannies says that the caregivers are paid salaries in the range of $15 to $20 per hour for work during the day and $11 to $13 per hour for night shifts. They are not entitled to overtime.
     
    They are, however, entitled to three weeks of paid vacation each year and are eligible for coverage under the public service health care, dental care and pension plans.
     
    News that Trudeau had put two nannies on the public payroll last November sparked some controversy. The PMO said at the time that Trudeau would not increase the overall household staff at the prime minister's residence but was making adjustments to the staff complement to suit his young family's needs.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict
    Democracy Watch co-founder Duff Conacher says he does not understand how conflict commissioner Paul Fraser can conclude that money paid to the premier is only a political benefit, not a private financial perk.

    Critics Dissatisfied With Finding That Clears Christy Clark Of Alleged Conflict

    Adjudicator Rules Firing Of Pregnant Manitoba Worker 'Discriminatory'

    Adjudicator Rules Firing Of Pregnant Manitoba Worker 'Discriminatory'
    Robert Dawson says in his ruling that the move by Take Time Cleaning and Lifestyle Services was discriminatory, and that it must pay Andrea Szabo for injury to her dignity and self-respect.

    Adjudicator Rules Firing Of Pregnant Manitoba Worker 'Discriminatory'

    First-Degree Murder Trial Begins For Woman Charged In Stepdaughter's Death

    First-Degree Murder Trial Begins For Woman Charged In Stepdaughter's Death
    In her opening remarks, a Crown prosecutor says Elaine Biddersingh turned her stepdaughter's life into a nightmare when the girl was in her care.

    First-Degree Murder Trial Begins For Woman Charged In Stepdaughter's Death

    Let Grocery Stores And Pharmacies Sell Medical Marijuana, Galen Weston Says

    Let Grocery Stores And Pharmacies Sell Medical Marijuana, Galen Weston Says
    The head of Canada's largest pharmacy chain says there is a critical role for drugstores to play in dispensing medical marijuana.

    Let Grocery Stores And Pharmacies Sell Medical Marijuana, Galen Weston Says

    Economic Fallout Of Alberta Wildfire Could Spread Beyond Closed Oil Operations

    Economic Fallout Of Alberta Wildfire Could Spread Beyond Closed Oil Operations
    The emergency has forced several oil companies in the area to shutter operations that, combined, produce hundreds of thousands of barrels of crude each day.

    Economic Fallout Of Alberta Wildfire Could Spread Beyond Closed Oil Operations

    Nova Scotia Veto Over Judges Salary Doesn't Compromise Independence: Minister

    The Canadian Bar Association Nova Scotia says amendments included in the Financial Measures Act legislation tabled on Monday would "seriously erode" judicial independence.

    Nova Scotia Veto Over Judges Salary Doesn't Compromise Independence: Minister