Partisanship clouds PM, opposition leaders’ meeting on ‘Francophonie’ issues
OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his counterparts from the four other main federal parties left a supposedly non-partisan meeting on how to help Canadian francophones divided and without a plan to save a French-language university in Ontario.
Trudeau met with Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer, the NDP’s Jagmeet Singh, Green Leader Elizabeth May and interim Bloc Quebecois Leader Mario Beaulieu — a rare cross-party leaders’ confab Scheer requested Monday after reductions to francophone services announced two weeks ago by Ontario’s Progressive Conservative government.
The mood after the Parliament Hill meeting was that it was largely symbolic — a show of support for francophones outside Quebec.
But did anything new come out of it?


