Close X
Wednesday, December 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Meets Greta Thunberg In Montreal As Climate Marches Dominate Federal Campaign

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Sep, 2019 08:27 PM

    OTTAWA - Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau said Friday he agrees with Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg that he needs to do more to fight climate change.

     
     

    And he also said his party — and not the Conservative party — is best suited to do that. Trudeau met Thunberg at a Montreal hotel in advance of the cross-country marches that are expected to dominate the federal election campaign today.

     

    Trudeau also said he will release a fully costed platform that includes assessments of Liberal promises by the parliamentary budget officer before the first televised leaders' debate on Wednesday.

     

    Trudeau and Green Leader Elizabeth May are joining what is expected to be the largest of dozens of marches taking place across Canada. Most of the federal party leaders are joining marchers, who are demanding cuts to greenhouse-gas emissions.

     
     

    One exception is Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, who's spending the day in the suburbs of Vancouver for an announcement and campaign stops with candidates in Maple Ridge and Richmond, but not marching anywhere. Scheer has said other Conservatives will be joining marchers.

     

    Asked about the Montreal meeting with Trudeau afterward, Thunberg said she tries not to "focus so much on individuals," but she added:

     

    "He's, of course, obviously not doing enough ... this is such a huge problem, this is a system that is wrong. So my message to all the politicians is the same: to just listen to the science and act on the science."

     

    Trudeau told reporters that he agreed with her, and praised her for inspiring young people.

     

    "I agree with her entirely. We need to do more," said Trudeau.

     

    "And that's why the ambitious plans we've laid out all week that have been criticized by some as too ambitious, are not too ambitious — are necessary."

     

    The meeting with the 16-year-old came with great political risk for Trudeau. Thunberg, who has galvanized the world's young people to demand action on climate change, has demonstrated confidence in speaking truth to power with her defiant condemnation of world leaders at the United Nations this past week for their inaction on fighting climate change.

     

    Trudeau has aligned himself with her on the campaign trail, praising the activism of young people and positioning the environment as a key issue. He has made a series of announcements this week aimed at reducing greenhouse-gas emissions, protecting oceans and habitat and encouraging conservation while simultaneously branding Scheer as a climate-change laggard.

     

    "Andrew Scheer is choosing to hide today instead of participating in climate marches," Trudeau said Friday.

     

    But Trudeau has also faced much criticism over the Liberal government's $4.5-billion purchase of the Trans Mountain oil-pipeline project, which critics see as a direct contradiction of the Liberal claim that the party represents Canada's best choice for environmental policy.

     

    Trudeau defended the pipeline purchase, saying any eventual profits from it will be invested in the fight against climate change.

     

    NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Trudeau can't be trusted on climate promises after his pipeline purchase.

     

    "It's obviously Greta's choice who she wants to meet with, but it's really clear that Mr. Trudeau promised really clearly in 2015 that he would not build the Trans Mountain, that he would oppose it," Singh said in Ladysmith, on Vancouver Island during an announcement on coastal protection.

     

    "That is something that should give everyone pause."

     

    Friday is Singh's fourth straight day campaigning in British Columbia. He was to join climate protesters later in Victoria.

     

    People's Party Leader Maxime Bernier is campaigning at home in Quebec's Beauce region, where he's striving to keep his seat after breaking away from the Conservatives last year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Reena Virk’s Killer Kelly Ellard Has Day Parole Extended By Six Months

    The board says Kelly Ellard, who now goes by Kerry Marie Sim, has show "sustained positive change" since her conviction and life sentence in 2005 for the second-degree murder of the 14-year-old.

    Reena Virk’s Killer Kelly Ellard Has Day Parole Extended By Six Months

    B.C. Government Approves Surrey's Plan To Establish Its Own Municipal Police Force

    Mike Farnworth and Surrey Mayor Doug McCallum released a statement this morning, announcing that a “joint project team has been struck.”

    B.C. Government Approves Surrey's Plan To Establish Its Own Municipal Police Force

    Retired Richmond, B.C. Fisherman Nets $60-Million Lottery Jackpot

    Retired Richmond, B.C. fisherman Joseph Katalinic holds his 60 million dollar win at the British Columbia's Lottery Corporation headquarters in Vancouver, Wednesday, August, 21, 2019. Katalinic's win is the largest of its kind in B.C. lotto history.  

    Retired Richmond, B.C. Fisherman Nets $60-Million Lottery Jackpot

    Vancouver To Assess Possible Court Action Against Campers Ordered Out Of Park

    Several dozen tents have remained in a park in Vancouver's Downtown Eastside following an eviction-notice deadline ordering as many as 200 people out of an encampment that began six months ago.

    Vancouver To Assess Possible Court Action Against Campers Ordered Out Of Park

    Independent Investigation Begins Into Langley RCMP Response To Langley Teen Carson Crimeni's Death

    The office that looks into all cases of police-involved deaths or serious injuries in British Columbia says it is examining what role two Langley RCMP officers may have played in the death of a 14-year-old boy

    Independent Investigation Begins Into Langley RCMP Response To Langley Teen Carson Crimeni's Death

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    A Vancouver Island man testified Wednesday that he didn't kill his two daughters and denied he tried to take his own life on the day they died.

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide