Sunday, February 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Thousands Apply For Spot On PM Trudeau's Youth Council

The Canadian Press, 12 Aug, 2016 01:08 PM
    OTTAWA — Newly released figures show that more than 8,400 young Canadians have applied to sit on a youth advisory board that will meet regularly with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
     
    There were 8,415 applicants to be on Trudeau's youth council, according to data provided to The Canadian Press. 
     
    A further 22,027 started the application process, but had yet to finish it before Friday's deadline.
     
    While only 30 will eventually be council to the prime minister, four-fifths of applicants said they were willing to share their thoughts with federal departments and agencies as part of a government push to create similar boards for other ministries.
     
    It's at once a shrewd political and policy development move for the government, says David Coletto of Abacus Research, who has conducted research on the views of young voters during last year's election.
     
    Political, he says, because it's a way for the Liberals to keep the young voters they won over in the last election in the fold for the next trip to the ballot box in 2019.
     
    On policy development, Coletto says it's a way for departments to bounce ideas off a focus group of interested Canadians, rather than passively posting a survey online and hoping people fill it out
     
     
    The data on the applicants show that 44.6 per cent — the largest cohort — come from Ontario, followed by Quebec, B.C. and Alberta. The majority, 78.3 per cent, live in urban communities, and more than half are women.
     
    The data show that of the people who have applied, almost half have a university education and grade averages of more than 86 per cent. Most worked their way through school, and two-fifths experienced mental health issues or financial stress at home.
     
    Of the applications received, 52.8 per cent identify as a visible minority, 11.1 per cent as a recent immigrant and 14.8 per cent identify as Inuit, Metis or First Nation. There are also 31.3 per cent who identify as LGBTQ. The percentages don't add up to 100 because applicants were allowed to choose multiple fields.
     
    Trudeau spokesman Cameron Ahmad said the government had no set expectations for the demographics of applicants, but were simply looking for a variety of life experiences to make up the advisory board and create a space for youth to get involved federally at the highest levels of government.
     
    Applicants who aren't selected for Trudeau's council will be matched with other departments and agencies based on their interests.
     
    The applicants are more interested in human rights and social justice than policies about infrastructure, families and social programs, which lay at the heart of the Liberals' election platform. There is an interest in jobs and the economy, but a larger focus on health and mental health as well as the environment.
     
     
    Coletto said the results aren't all that surprising because the issues they are interested in are among those young people in general are passionate about.
     
    "It's not surprising that arts and culture beats out farming and food," he said of the results.
     
    "Farming and food is critical to all of our lives — we need to eat — but is it something that I'm going to want to actually admit I'm interested in? That's probably not the case."
     
     
    A BY-THE-NUMBERS LOOK AT THE APPLICANTS TO THE PRIME MINISTER'S YOUTH COUNCIL
     
    8,415: Canadians who have completed the application to be on the youth advisory council.
     
    22,027: Applicants who started but have yet to complete the process.
     
    8:33: In minutes and seconds, the amount of time it took applicants to complete the online form.
     
    44.3: Percentage of applicants who said they had an interest in justice and human rights.
     
     
    42.7: Percentage of applicants who said they had an interest in health, mental health and well-being.
     
    6: Percentage who said they had an interest in public infrastructure and livable communities.
     
    5.2: Percentage who had an interest in paying taxes and tax fairness.
     
    2.1: Percentage who were interested in pay and pension.
     
    30.2: Percentage who said they lived on reserve.
     
    2.3: Percentage who said they were refugees.
     
    25.1: Percentage who said they had been unemployed or on employment insurance.
     
    57.1: Percentage of voters age 18 to 24 who cast a ballot in the last election, an increase of 18.3 percentage points from 2011.
     
    57.4: Percentage of voters age 25 to 34 who voted in the last election, 12.3 percentage points higher than in 2011.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Balaclava Rapist' Gets Day Parole After More Than 30 Years In Jail

    'Balaclava Rapist' Gets Day Parole After More Than 30 Years In Jail
      Larry Takahashi, 63, was serving three life sentences after admitting to raping at least 30 women in Edmonton in the 1970s and 1980s.

    'Balaclava Rapist' Gets Day Parole After More Than 30 Years In Jail

    Smoke In Ottawa Data Centre Shuts Down Blackberry Email, Phoenix Pay System

    Smoke In Ottawa Data Centre Shuts Down Blackberry Email, Phoenix Pay System
    OTTAWA — Smoke inside a federal data centre this morning has shut down email, some government websites and even the maligned Phoenix payroll system.

    Smoke In Ottawa Data Centre Shuts Down Blackberry Email, Phoenix Pay System

    WestJet Passenger Wants Airline To Change Policy After Loss Of Tiny Gecko

    WestJet Passenger Wants Airline To Change Policy After Loss Of Tiny Gecko
    Meryl Bishop says on Facebook she was required to send the gargoyle gecko to the cargo hold of a WestJet flight during her trip on Sunday.  

    WestJet Passenger Wants Airline To Change Policy After Loss Of Tiny Gecko

    Body Of Missing Calgary Youngster Recovered In Yoho National Park

    Body Of Missing Calgary Youngster Recovered In Yoho National Park
    Parks Canada spokesman Lisa Paulson says the 11-year-old and his nine-year-old brother were jumping on rocks at the edge of the fast-moving river on Friday evening when both youngsters tumbled into the water.

    Body Of Missing Calgary Youngster Recovered In Yoho National Park

    Canadian Armed Forces Warn Pokemon Go Users After 'Occurrences' On Three Bases

    Canadian Armed Forces Warn Pokemon Go Users After 'Occurrences' On Three Bases
    HALIFAX — The Canadian Armed Forces are warning Pokemon Go players — both in and out of uniform — not to search for Pokemon on military property.

    Canadian Armed Forces Warn Pokemon Go Users After 'Occurrences' On Three Bases

    Nova Scotia Father Convicted In Assault That 'Crushed' 3-Week-Old Son's Skull 'Like An Egg'

    Nova Scotia Father Convicted In Assault That 'Crushed' 3-Week-Old Son's Skull 'Like An Egg'
    Today, the boy is four-and-a-half, cannot walk and has "significant mental and physical challenges."

    Nova Scotia Father Convicted In Assault That 'Crushed' 3-Week-Old Son's Skull 'Like An Egg'