Supreme Court justice takes aim at ‘narcissistic populism’ in graduation speech
OTTAWA — One of Canada’s top judges has made an impassioned plea to the graduating class of law students at an American university to stand against injustice fuelled by “narcissistic populism.”
In a speech that seemingly took aim at the actions and words of the sitting American president, Supreme Court Justice Rosalie Abella did not once utter the name of U.S. President Donald Trump.
Yet Trump’s feuds with American judges who have halted his planned travel bans from predominantly Muslim countries, the ongoing fallout from his firing of former FBI director James Comey, and his populist policies ran through Abella’s keynote address at a graduation ceremony Sunday.
Abella told the graduating class at Brandeis University, west of Boston, Mass., that she has become deeply worried about the state of justice in the world seven decades after the Second World War.


