Trudeau on Canadian trash issue: Loopholes will be looked into
Screams and requests for selfies greeted Trudeau at the global Media Center of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) in Manila at the end of a two-day summit he attended on his first series of foreign trips as head of government.
“Either way, most Canadians believe Canada should be taking a role in the fight against ISIS”, said Quinto Maggi, president of Mainstreet research.
President Obama, himself no stranger to worldwide flattery, recounted his first conversation with Trudeau during their bilateral meeting in Manila.
Points to Trudeau, as internet users were able to dig up footage of the newly appointed Prime Minister performing a striptease back in 2011, POPSugar reports.
“It’s tricky, there’s no question about it”, Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall said last week when asked if it’s possible for Ottawa and the provinces to unite behind a common plan to reduce Canada’s carbon footprint.
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau addressed the issue of garbage from his country exported to the Philippines, saying the loopholes that allowed it to happen will be looked into.
Note to readers: This is a corrected story.
“My wife Sophie is going to be very excited to hear about Michelle’s garden, because she has started a vegetable garden as well in our backyard”, he said referring to the United States first lady.
Another top priority is to “work with relevant ministers, including the ministers of worldwide trade and environment and climate change, to prepare for the North American Leaders Summit in Canada”.
Obama, 54, recounted to reporters a phone call he’d made to Trudeau to congratulate him on his recent election win at the youthful age of 43.
“The first call I made to him, I said, ‘Justin, congratulations”.
“I pointed out that although Canada has shifted its approach on a broad range of multilateral and worldwide issues, we remain committed to the fact that Russia’s interference in Ukraine must cease, that we stand with the Ukrainian people and expect the President to engage fully in the Minsk peace process”, Mr. Trudeau told reporters on November 16.
President Putin “did not respond positively”, Mr. MacDonald said.
The two leaders agreed on the importance of the US-led campaign against Islamic State but Trudeau vowed to stick to his promise to withdraw six Canadian jets that have been attacking the militants in Iraq and Syria.
Trudeau favors Canada’s ratification of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a 12-nation trade agreement championed by U.S. President Barack Obama that is meant to become the core of a region-wide free trade bloc.
Much like his father, it appears we are in a state of “Trudeaumania” once again; sixty per cent of Canadians say they approve of the job that Trudeau has done while 55 per cent say they would vote for the Liberal Party if there was an election redo.
Added Coleman: “It’s not hard to predict a little more friendliness between Obama and Trudeau than there was between Obama and Harper”.
One of the things Trudeau talked about a lot at this summit was the need to put Canada on the front lines of the fight against climate change. Trudeau, meanwhile, came off like an eager-to-please prep school kid, which, to be fair, is pretty standard for Canada’s most powerful drama teacher.