Warren KInsellaOn the night in question, I was at an event in Toronto honouring Sen. Murray Sinclair. As it was getting underway, I received a text message from one of the members of Parliament who had been at the very centre of it all.

“He should not have been out of his seat,” the text said. “This was a big error on his part.”

The “error” was an actual physical confrontation on the floor of the House of Commons, just like the ones they have in the Taiwanese Parliament. The “he” was the Prime Minister of Canada, Justin Trudeau.

Until former Justice Sinclair spoke, everyone in the room stared at their devices, periodically shaking their heads in wonder. Ten observations, from afar:

TRUDEAU SCANDALS
(Partial list only)
Did the government pressure Lucki and the RCMP to do their bidding?
By Michael Taube
 
Liberals’ moving expenses apology bogus
By Michael Taube
 
Trudeau genuflects to a tyrant
By Pat Murphy
 
My Canada does not include Alberta – Trudeau
By Michael Taube
 
Khadr settlement defies due process, insults Canadians
By Maddie Di Muccio
 
Trudeau’s Asian trip a diplomatic and trade disaster
By Maddie Di Muccio
 
A #MeToo cloud hangs over Justin Trudeau
By Michael Taube
 
Jody Wilson-Raybould’s deeply Canadian courage
By Peter Stockland
 
Trudeau tries to weasel his way out of SNC scandal
By Alec Bruce
 
Liberals swept Norman under the rug well before election
By Brian Giesbrecht
 
Racist photos confirm Trudeau is a bare-faced charlatan
By Doug Firby
 
For a complete list of Trudeau’s Scandals, click here
  1. The law: When the prime minister intentionally grabbed and yanked the Conservative whip – much like Donald Trump’s campaign manager recently did to a reporter – it met the Criminal Code definition of assault. When he elbowed an NDP MP Ruth Ellen Brosseau, it didn’t. The elbow in Brosseau’s chest likely met the civil definition of assault, however. If the physical stuff had happened off the Hill – in your workplace, for instance – charges, lawsuits and firings would have been the almost inevitable result.
  2. The Internet: Live by social media, die by it. The prime minister has assiduously cultivated attention online, and especially internationally. When he took leave of his senses last Wednesday night, his actions became front-page news around the world. You cannot seek attention and then complain that it is too critical. Many Liberal partisans are doing just that, and they sound like the Conservative partisans they replaced. They sound pathetic.
  3. The optics: The boxing photo ops are over. So, too, the earnest claims to being a feminist. The moment a man applies force in a way that it hurts a woman – inadvertent or not – it changes both, and the man is a feminist no more. If the country learned anything from the Ghomeshi trial, it is that.
  4. The Liberals: This appalling episode has revealed the Liberal House Leader to possess a genial authoritarian streak. It has shown that the Liberal whip is in fully over his head, and wholly incapable of controlling his troops. It does not reflect well on the Speaker, either, because it is now apparent he does not oversee the Commons very well. And the prime minister? Well, what was once youthful and fresh now looks too-young and arrogant. In a matter of minutes, he undid his good reputation.
  5. The NDP: As is their wont, they overplayed their hand, calling the elbow to Brosseau a deliberate criminal assault when any of the lawyers in their caucus could have told them it was not. Mulcair looked like the enraged father who was defending a daughter who had been manhandled, and it was an understandable response. Trudeau’s return to the scene of the alleged crime – to confront Mulcair, apparently, and toss around a few F-bombs – wasn’t understandable at all. It was another huge lapse in judgment.
  6. The Conservatives: If they’re smart, they will keep their cool, and stay above the fray. Referring the matter to committee was a shrewd move – it will ensure the controversy will be kept alive for weeks. It’s a safe bet that Stephen Harper was smiling somewhere on Wednesday night.
  7. The cause: Some Liberals will claim there was a need to invoke closure, and radically change the rules of the House, to ensure the right-to-die legislation met the Supreme Court’s deadline. That is spurious and false. 1. A matter of conscience should never, ever be rushed. 2. Canadian physicians were given sufficient guidelines in the high court’s ruling, and are applying them. 3. The bill was always going to be amended and delayed in the Senate. What, therefore, was the damn rush?
  8. The footage:  It is going to figure in the next election campaign. It is going to be as ubiquitous as the Zapruder footage. When you watch it, you cannot help but lose respect for any number of participants. It is bad.
  9. The precedent: I worked for Jean Chretien back in February 1996, on the frosty day of the now-famous Shawinigan Handshake. That incident, and this one, are different. Chretien faced a threat; Trudeau did not. Chretien was not the instigator of the confrontation; Trudeau was. Chretien used force with a man; Trudeau used force in a way that hurt a woman. The Shawinigan Handshake became a positive for Chretien. For Trudeau, this never will.
  10. The contrast: Sitting there, listening to the extraordinarily thoughtful, kind, mature and reserved words of Senator Sinclair, I was struck by something else. I turned to my wife, a Liberal and a feminist, and said: “Senator Sinclair sounds like a prime minister. Tonight, the prime minister doesn’t look like a prime minister.”

Something changed rather dramatically, last Wednesday night. For Justin Trudeau, none of it was good.

Warren Kinsella is a Canadian journalist, political adviser and commentator.

© Troy Media


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