Close X
Friday, January 10, 2025
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau's Wife Shouldn't Get Extra Staff, Say Conservatives And NDP

The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2016 11:41 AM
    OTTAWA — The opposition parties are making some political hay over media reports that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's wife wants extra staff to help manage her official duties.
     
    Sophie Gregoire was quoted this week in the Quebec City newspaper Le Soleil as saying she is overwhelmed by the crush of requests from groups that either invite her to speak or ask her to help promote their causes.
     
    She has pointed out she only has one aide to help manage her official duties, noting she must also raise three young children.
     
    The issue became fodder for the opposition parties in the House of Commons on Thursday as well as on social media.
     
    Tory MP Candice Bergen told reporters that former prime minister Stephen Harper's wife, Laureen, managed with just a single aide.
     
    Bergen wondered how the government could hire more staff for Gregoire when there are Canadian families who are struggling to make ends meet.
     
     
    Bergen said the couple had to be aware of what they were getting into when Trudeau sought the Liberal leadership.
     
    Tory MP Jason Kenney was even more blunt, saying Laureen Harper never complained about her duties.
     
    "Harpers paid for babysitters, not taxpayers," Kenney tweeted Thursday night. "And they didn't inherit millions. Nor did Laureen whinge about it."
     
    New Democrat Niki Ashton said it shows how out of touch the governing Liberals are with the realities that working women face today.
     
    "Hearing statements like that certainly doesn't speak to the reality that Canadian women face and the kind of struggles that, you know, that they're undertaking day in, day out," Ashton told reporters in the Commons.
     
    "Certainly the kind of statements we heard from the prime minister's wife, you know, speak to that disconnect with the reality that Canadian women face."
     
    Government House Leader Dominic LeBlanc said it's a long-standing tradition that the prime minister's wife gets support in performing official activities she is asked to do, saying she is asked to attend an enormous number of events.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Close Brush With Flames: Staff At Alberta School Bring Students Through Wildfire

    Close Brush With Flames: Staff At Alberta School Bring Students Through Wildfire
    An elementary school principal from fire-ravaged Ft. McMurray, Alta., is crediting her staff for ferrying 70 students to safety through the heart of the blaze.

    Close Brush With Flames: Staff At Alberta School Bring Students Through Wildfire

    School Year Uncertain For 12,000 Students Evacuated From Fort McMurray, Alta.

    School Year Uncertain For 12,000 Students Evacuated From Fort McMurray, Alta.
    Alberta's Municipal Affairs Minister Danielle Larivee said schools across the province are prepared to welcome students from the Fort McMurray area.

    School Year Uncertain For 12,000 Students Evacuated From Fort McMurray, Alta.

    Drones Reportedly Spotted Near Two Large B.C. Wildfires

    Drones Reportedly Spotted Near Two Large B.C. Wildfires
    Fire information officer Amanda Reynolds said the BC Wildfire Service received two reports of unmanned aerial vehicles near wildfires on Friday.

    Drones Reportedly Spotted Near Two Large B.C. Wildfires

    First Of Two Pregnant Walruses Gives Birth At Quebec City Aquarium

    First Of Two Pregnant Walruses Gives Birth At Quebec City Aquarium
    The aquarium says it's the first time in Canada a captive walrus has delivered a live full-term baby.

    First Of Two Pregnant Walruses Gives Birth At Quebec City Aquarium

    Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch

    Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch
    An independent tribunal has recommended increases totalling 14 per cent from 2013-14 to 2016-17, including accumulated retroactive pay of almost $1 million, a Justice spokesman confirms.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Mulls $32,000 Pay Hike For Judges Amid Fiscal Crunch

    P.E.I. Confederation Museum To Shut Down Permanently Due To Lack Of Interest

    P.E.I. Confederation Museum To Shut Down Permanently Due To Lack Of Interest
    Founders Hall in downtown Charlottetown opened in 2001 and explained Canada's inception, beginning with the Charlottetown Conference in 1864.

    P.E.I. Confederation Museum To Shut Down Permanently Due To Lack Of Interest