Freeland speech to trumpet Canadian tolerance, but no shouting at Trump please
OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland says the world wants Canada to trumpet tolerance and diversity. That’s her plan for what is being billed as a major foreign policy speech early next month.
International figures, such as former UN secretary general Kofi Annan, think that’s a fine idea and about time too, in a world grappling with growing nativism, intolerance and anti-immigration sentiment — a phenomenon they lay at the feet of U.S. President Donald Trump.
But Freeland diverges with many in the world on whether that values speech needs to aim at Trump.
Annan, who was in Ottawa recently to help launch a new think-tank devoted to the study of pluralism, says the time has come for politicians to show courage and speak out in the face of disturbing new global trends.


