Justin Trudeau
Justin Trudeau | |
---|---|
Personal details | |
Born | Ottawa, Ontario | December 25, 1971
Political party | Liberal |
Height | 150px |
Spouse | Sophie Grégoire |
Relations | Pierre Trudeau and Margaret Trudeau |
Alma mater | McGill University |
Occupation | Teacher |
Justin Trudeau (born December 25, 1971 in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada) is the eldest son of the late former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and Margaret Sinclair Trudeau Kemper. Trudeau has recently won the federal Liberal Party nomination in the Montreal riding of Papineau.Please do not save test edits. If you want to experiment, please use the shitbox Please do not save test edits. If you want to experiment, please use the shitboxPlease do not save test edits. If you want to experiment, please use the shitbox
Early life and personal life
Trudeau and his younger brother, Alexandre (Sacha), were both born on December 25. Pierre and Margaret Trudeau separated in 1977, when Justin was 6 years old. Pierre retired as Prime Minister in 1984.
Justin Trudeau was only the second child in Canadian history to be born during a father's term as Prime Minister; he was preceded by John A. Macdonald's youngest daughter Margaret Mary Macdonald.
Pierre Trudeau raised his children in relative privacy in Montreal. Justin studied English literature (BA , McGill University) and Education (B.Ed, University of British Columbia), eventually becoming a teacher in British Columbia. He is currently completing a Master of Arts in Geography at McGill University.
At the state funeral of Pierre Trudeau in 2000, Justin delivered a memorable eulogy.[1]
On May 28, 2005, Justin Trudeau married Sophie Grégoire, a former model and Quebec television host. Trudeau is one of several children of former Prime Ministers who have become Canadian media personalities. The others are Ben Mulroney, Catherine Clark, and Justin's younger brother, Alexandre. Though Pierre Trudeau and Brian Mulroney were longtime foes, this rivalry did not carry over to their sons, as Ben Mulroney was a guest at Justin Trudeau's wedding. In April of 2007, the couple announced they are expecting their first child. [1]
Media and political career
Advocacy
Trudeau has used his media footing to offer his opinion or act as an advocate for various issues.
- He has been a campaigner for winter sports safety since the death of his brother Michel in an avalanche on a ski trip in 1998.
- In 2003, he served as a panelist on CBC Radio's Canada Reads series, where he championed The Colony of Unrequited Dreams by Wayne Johnston.
- On 17 September 2006, Trudeau hosted a rally in Ramsden Park in Toronto, calling for Canadian participation in the Darfur crisis.
- On 25 October 2006, Trudeau appeared on CTV's Canada AM. Asked about what he thought of Quebecers asking for national recognition, he replied that nationalism today as a general concept is "based on a smallness of thought.”[2] His comments were seen as a criticism of Michael Ignatieff's push to recognize Quebec as a nation.
- During the 2006 Liberal Party of Canada leadership convention, Trudeau endorsed Gerard Kennedy.[3] When Kennedy dropped off after the 2nd ballot, Trudeau went with him to support former Environment Minister--and ultimate winner--Stephane Dion.
Entrance into political realm
In January 2007, rumours were getting persistent about Justin Trudeau entering politics, especially after being highly active in the 2006 Liberal convention.[4] It was rumoured that Trudeau was going to run in the Montreal Outremont riding which is a traditional Liberal stronghold, after former Minister of Transport Jean Lapierre resigned from the House of Commons to become a political commentator.[5]
A nomination vote for the Liberal candidate in Papineau was held on April 29, 2007, which Trudeau handily won. Trudeau received 690 votes, while runners-up Mary Deros received 350 votes and Basilio Giordano received 220. 634 votes were needed to win the nomination.[6] With his nomination victory, Trudeau will enter the next election against incumbent Bloc Québécois MP Vivian Barbot.
CBC Television announced in April 2007 that Justin Trudeau would appear in the two-part miniseries, The Great War, portraying Talbot Mercer Papineau (1883-1917). Papineau was killed in action in Ypres, Belgium and was among Canada's first Rhodes Scholars. Coincidentally, Trudeau holds the Liberal nomination in the very riding named after Talbot Mercer Papineau's lineage: this includes his great-great-grandfather, seigneur Joseph Papineau (1752-1841) and Talbot's great-grandfather, reformist Patriote Louis-Joseph Papineau (1786-1871).