Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau's 2013 'Just Watch Me' Note Fetches $12,000 On EBay

The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:40 PM
    TORONTO — A note that referenced the past while predicting the future has been sold for more than $12,000.
     
    The document is a 2013 note in which then-Liberal leadership contender Justin Trudeau predicted he would succeed Stephen Harper as Canada's prime minister.
     
    Michael Kydd was on a Porter Airlines flight on March 20 that year and passed a note to Trudeau asking "Can you really beat Harper?"
     
    Trudeau responded with a quote from his late father — former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau— "Just watch me."
     
    The younger Trudeau, who was running for the Liberal leadership at the time, is now the prime minister-designate after helping his party win a majority government in Monday's election.
     
    The note, which was posted on eBay, sold this afternoon for a total of $12,301.
     
    Trudeau's father replied "Well, just watch me!" on Oct. 13, 1970, when asked by a reporter how far he would go in limiting civil liberties to combat separatist terrorists during the October Crisis.
     
    Three days later, Pierre Elliott Trudeau invoked the War Measures Act, giving police more power in response to the kidnapping of British diplomat James Cross and Quebec provincial cabinet minister Pierre Laporte by the FLQ.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods

    Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods
    DISTRICT OF HIGHLANDS, B.C. — A firebug may be on the loose in the suburban Victoria District of Highlands, on Vancouver Island.

    Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods

    Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad

    Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad
    Liberal MP Joyce Murray is apologizing for a newspaper advertisement in which she appears to be feeding racial stereotypes about aboriginal people.

    Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad

    B.C. Health Firings Prompt Legal Changes To Pave Way For Investigation

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's ongoing health firings scandal is about to share the stage with the Liberal government's vaunted liquefied natural gas project law.

    B.C. Health Firings Prompt Legal Changes To Pave Way For Investigation

    Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000

    Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000
    A hotelier and former banker of Indian origin has admitted in a federal court to defrauding an investor of $500,000 and now faces a prison sentence, according to a federal prosecutor in Tennessee.

    Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000

    Big Banks Pass On Part Of Bank Of Canada Rate Cut, Prime Rate Reduced To 2.70%

    Big Banks Pass On Part Of Bank Of Canada Rate Cut, Prime Rate Reduced To 2.70%
    OTTAWA — Less than 24 hours after the Bank of Canada cuts its key interest rate, Canada's big banks have partially followed suit.

    Big Banks Pass On Part Of Bank Of Canada Rate Cut, Prime Rate Reduced To 2.70%

    Restaurants Consider Raising Menu Prices To Keep Up With Soaring Cost Of Food

    Restaurants Consider Raising Menu Prices To Keep Up With Soaring Cost Of Food
    Quarterly figures from Restaurants Canada suggests that 65 per cent of the country's eateries report their food budgets are higher than they were at the same time last year.

    Restaurants Consider Raising Menu Prices To Keep Up With Soaring Cost Of Food