Battered Trudeau gets brief reprieve amid Canada blackface scandal
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[September 21, 2019]
By Moira Warburton
TORONTO (Reuters) - Canadian Prime Minister
Justin Trudeau got his first day out of the spotlight on Saturday after
being hammered for images showing him in blackface, which have
threatened to derail his re-election campaign.
Trudeau, 47, was in eastern Canada when pictures first emerged on
Wednesday showing him in brown makeup at a 2001 "Arabian Nights" party
when he was a 29-year-old teacher. He held a hasty press conference on
his plane and apologized, ashen-faced, before traveling to other western
cities where the scandal dominated questions.
The revelations were followed by two days of uproar, international
ridicule and attacks by the Canadian opposition who called him a
hypocrite and demanded he resign. Trudeau apologized repeatedly and
begged Canadians for forgiveness, but said he will not step down.
Arriving in Toronto on Friday, home to key ethnic ridings that he needs
to win, Trudeau attempted to pivot back to policy issues with an assault
rifle ban.
"Hi Mr. Blackface! Nice to meet you," one woman said to the prime
minister as he strolled in Toronto's Greektown neighborhood.
Canadian public reaction to the images has been mixed and it was too
early to say whether the scandal will shift votes ahead of an Oct. 21
election. Trudeau's Liberals were tied in polls with the opposition
Conservatives before the scandal erupted.
"He wasn't a KKK sympathizer. It's not like we discovered youthful
anti-Semitic writings," said Yves Boisvert, a columnist with
French-language newspaper La Presse. The story was generally given less
prominence by the Quebec media judging by front pages and home pages.
Many Canadians said they were disappointed but not surprised by the
images.
"It is demeaning. The color of our skin is not a costume prop," said
Samya Hasan, executive director for the Toronto-based Council for
Agencies Serving South Asians, adding she was unsurprised because
despite Trudeau's reputation as a vocal progressive, he is still "a
privileged white person."
Trudeau, whose father was the architect of Canada's multiculturalism
system, acknowledged that growing up as the white son of a former prime
minister left him with "a massive blind spot."
Pollster David Coletto of Abacus Data said the biggest risk to the
Liberals was low voter turnout among their supporters.
"They were already, in our data, showing that they were less motivated
than Conservatives ... there is certainly the chance that this further
de-motivates those Liberals and makes them less likely to want to
actually cast a ballot," he said.
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Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks during an election
campaign stop in Toronto, Ontario, Canada September 20, 2019.
REUTERS/Carlos Osorio
BLOW TO CANADA'S BRAND
Trudeau returned to Ottawa on Friday and goes back on the campaign
trail on Sunday afternoon.
"The down day gives the party, his campaign team and of course
himself, the capacity and time to think about what's gone on and
think about ... to what degree they can regain control of their
campaign," said Allan Tupper, a University of British Columbia
political science professor.
Several Liberal cabinet members came out in support of Trudeau
including Harjit Sajjan, Canada's first Sikh defense minister, who
said the photos "do not represent the person he is now." Foreign
Minister Chrystia Freeland, one of the most prominent members of the
Liberal cabinet, said she was "troubled and disappointed" but that
she accepted Trudeau's apology and had full confidence in him as
party leader.
Trudeau introduced a gender-balanced cabinet when he took office in
2015 and appointed several minorities to top cabinet positions,
including the defense, immigration and natural resources portfolios.
U.S. President Donald Trump, who has clashed with Trudeau in the
past, said he was "surprised by the number of times" Trudeau had
dressed in blackface, while late night comedians excoriated the
prime minister.
Famously declaring that "Canada is back" when he was elected,
Trudeau won international plaudits for his focus on feminism, the
environment and the need for multilateral organizations.
Foreign diplomats have said his stance was important at a time when
populism is on the rise and the United States seems intent on
shrinking its global ambitions. Canada is bidding for a seat on the
United Nations Security Council in 2021.
"It's embarrassing," Ladonna James, a Toronto resident, said of the
images. "It's a real blow to the Canadian brand."
(Reporting by David Ljunggren and Moira Warburton in Toronto, Kelsey
Johnson in Ottawa; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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