Trudeau says he’ll stay focused on Canadians’, and Quebecers’, real priorities
OTTAWA — Canada faces a lot of challenges that won’t get addressed if the country gets “bogged down” in another round of constitutional haggling, Justin Trudeau said Monday.
The prime minister was expanding on his blunt, immediate rejection last week of Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard’s plan to eventually secure recognition of his province’s distinctiveness in the Constitution.
Trudeau was criticized in some quarters for being too dismissive of Couillard’s initiative, before the premier had even formally unveiled a 200-page rationale for restarting a nationwide dialogue about Quebec’s long-standing conditions for formally signing onto the country’s highest law of the land.
Bloc Quebecois Leader Martine Ouellet said Monday that Trudeau’s dismissal, before he’d even read Couillard’s manifesto, was a “slap” in the face of the most federalist premier Quebec has ever seen and further evidence that independence is the only solution.


