Close X
Thursday, October 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Wayne Gretzkysays Appearance At Harper Campaign Event 'A Favour' For The PM

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2015 01:29 PM
    TORONTO — Wayne Gretzky says he was doing Stephen Harper "a favour" when he appeared with him at a campaign event, and the Great One says he would do the same for any prime minister.
     
    Harper and Gretzky played table hockey with some children at an event in Toronto last month.
     
    The prime minister interviewed Gretzky in front of hundreds of supporters and the conversation mostly focused on hockey — until the end. The Hockey Hall of Famer told Harper he thought he had been an "unreal prime minister" who had been "wonderful to the whole country."
     
    Harper's Conservatives were voted out of office when Justin Trudeau's Liberals won a majority government in Monday's federal election.
     
    Gretzky has backed Conservative politicians before. He came out in support of Ontario Progressive Conservative Leader Patrick Brown in February during Brown's run for the party leadership.
     
    But in an interview Thursday, Gretzky said he always heeds a prime minister's call, and the Harper event was no different.
     
     
    "In 1981, I did a luncheon for prime minister (Pierre) Trudeau at the time. In 1986, Mr. (Brian) Mulroney and (his wife) Mila asked me to host an event for a charity of their choice, which I did," he said in an interview about his No. 99 Wayne Gretzky Collection fashion line.
     
    The 54-year-old Gretzky also recalled joining Jean Chretien in the Czech Republic in 2003 to help promote Canada's bid for the 2010 Winter Olympics.
     
    "When Mr. Harper reached out to me and asked me to do a Q&A with him it's simple: I can't vote in this country. But ... when the prime minister of Canada calls you, you say: 'OK, I'll do the favour for you.' So whoever is going to be the next prime minister, if they call me for the favour I'd reach out again."
     
    Gretzky is ineligible to vote because of a controversial law that prevents Canadians who have lived outside the country for more than five years from casting a ballot.
     
    "(Those are) the rules of the way the system is, and the Canadian people and the government passed those rules," he said. "And if (those are) the rules, you've got to live by the rules."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Six Dead In Punjab's Moga District; Police Suspect 'Granthi' Slit Throats Of 5 Before Killing Self

    Six Dead In Punjab's Moga District; Police Suspect 'Granthi' Slit Throats Of 5 Before Killing Self
    At least five young people were brutally hacked to death in their house in Punjab's Moga district on Thursday, police said. The suspected killer, a 'granthi' (Sikh religious preacher) too was also found dead under mysterious circumstances.

    Six Dead In Punjab's Moga District; Police Suspect 'Granthi' Slit Throats Of 5 Before Killing Self

    Ontario Government Under Fire For Office Art With Explicit Sex Images

    Ontario Government Under Fire For Office Art With Explicit Sex Images
    Sacred Circle VI by French-Canadian artist Rosalie Maheux is part of a collection of works by artists under the age of 30 on display in the John B. Aird gallery in the lobby of an Ontario government office block in downtown Toronto.

    Ontario Government Under Fire For Office Art With Explicit Sex Images

    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