Close X
Monday, November 18, 2024
ADVT 
National

Toddler Turned Prime Minister: Reporter Recalls Justin Trudeau's First Quotable Words

John Ward The Canadian Press, 24 Oct, 2015 03:12 PM
    On an overcast Christmas afternoon in 1973, a handful of reporters and photographers huddled on the snowy pavement outside the front door of Ottawa's Civic Hospital, waiting for the prime minister.
     
    They were almost all young journalists. While their seniors savoured the warm oven aromas of Christmas turkeys at home, the juniors were dispatched for a brief photo op in the snow and cold.
     
    Pierre Trudeau was en route to the hospital to visit wife Margaret and his newborn son, his second Christmas baby in two years.
     
    The prime minister's car pulled up and he stepped out, hoisted his first-born, two-year-old son in his arms and strode towards the door.
     
    There was no deep phalanx of cameras, no boiling scrum waving microphones and shouting questions and no squad of grim security staff to clear the way, just a clutch of journalists, father, son and maybe a single, watchful Mountie.
     
    The prime minister, a deceptively diminutive man who somehow always seemed taller than life, smiled as a couple of people in the group congratulated him.
     
    He commented that it was a fine day, that mother and son were doing fine. He was not a man known for small talk, but he was clearly a happy man.
     
     
    It was a quiet moment in a more innocent time, before journalists and politicians were automatic antagonists, when civility and deference still had a feeble grip on politics and press.
     
    After a perfunctory chat and the obligatory photos, Trudeau moved up the steps. The dark-eyed toddler in his arms peered curiously over his father's shoulder at the strangers and their cameras and notebooks. He smiled and raised a pudgy hand in a wave.
     
    "Happy Christmas," he piped. "Happy birthday."
     
    It was Justin Trudeau's first comment to the media and was duly written down and sent out on the old-fashioned news wires. No selfies, no Twitter feeds, no Facebook comments, no Instagram, no live coverage, just a small item and a photo of a little boy on his birthday about to meet a new brother, Sacha.
     
    In two weeks, that toddler, long grown to manhood, will assume his father's mantle and become prime minister.
     
    His dogged election campaign, with his appeals to "the better angels," his calls for unity and his insistence that things can always be better, will likely be the definitive image for Canadians.
     
    But for the handful who saw him that morning, there is another, indelible image of a brief, bright smile and a hesitant wave that will linger.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons
    OTTAWA — The federal government is delaying implementation of regulations intended to help police trace crime guns — the seventh time it has put off the measures.

    Feds Again Put Off Gun-marking Regulations Aimed At Helping Police Trace Weapons

    Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

    The Conservative leader is stressing the latter at a stop in Fredericton, N.B., where he is promising to add 6,000 people to bolster the reserve ranks of the Canadian Forces reserves.

    Under Fire Over Duffy, Harper Clings To Conservative Campaign Message

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court
    Was Mike Duffy railroaded by a group of Stephen Harper's aides into telling the public he would repay his Senate expenses, or was Duffy the one shaking down the PMO?

    The Plan For Duffy's Fake Repayment Dissected In Court

    WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations

    WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations
    Dr. Ophira Ginsburg, a clinician and researcher at Women's College Hospital in Toronto, takes on the new role in Geneva on Oct. 1.

    WHO appoints Canadian MD to help guide women's cancer care in developing nations

    Indian Man Gets $3,000 And A Second Chance To Migrate To Canada

    Indian Man Gets $3,000 And A Second Chance To Migrate To Canada
    Dharmendrakumar Chandrakantbhai Patel's immigration application was rejected in 2014 on the grounds that he "had not supplied any of the documents allegedly requested

    Indian Man Gets $3,000 And A Second Chance To Migrate To Canada

    Watch: After Three Months, Ontario Woman Caught On Video Swiping Blooms From Grave

    Watch: After Three Months, Ontario Woman Caught On Video Swiping Blooms From Grave
    LONDON, Ont. — An unknown woman in London, Ont., has been caught on video repeatedly stealing flowers from a gravestone.

    Watch: After Three Months, Ontario Woman Caught On Video Swiping Blooms From Grave