When every day is a tough day
Toronto Star|January 21, 2024
Justin Trudeau gets a lot of advice. It goes with the job of being prime minister.
SUSAN DELACOURT
When every day is a tough day

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has acknowledged that there are Canadians who aren’t going to take his word for anything, no matter what he says.

But who does Trudeau seek out when times get tough, as they have so often over the past year?

“Define ‘tough times,’ because that sounds like Monday to me,” Trudeau said when he sat down with me for a wide-ranging, one-on-one interview last week. “Every day is tough. We’re running a country in a really, really complex time.”

As 2024 gets underway, and as Trudeau prepares to huddle with his cabinet and the larger Liberal caucus to map out the year ahead, there’s no let-up in sight for those tough times.

Canada is in the midst of a housing and affordability crisis, which Trudeau’s critics — and there are many of them — are all too eager to pin on him. The prime minister has just come out of a round of year-end interviews in which he was asked repeatedly why he was staying on in the job.

Conservatives and their leader, Pierre Poilievre, are surging in the polls. A war in the Middle East is reverberating on the ground in Canada, dividing communities and Trudeau’s own Liberal caucus. Ukraine is about to head into its third year under an illegal Russian invasion. Meanwhile, Canada’s largest ally and neighbour, the United States, is flirting with the prospect of putting Donald Trump back in the White House, with all the collateral damage that could bring to Canada and the world.

Trudeau has said repeatedly that he doesn’t intend to walk away from his job or any of these challenges, so we didn’t waste a lot of time in this interview talking about whether he would — or should — pack it in.

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