Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Trudeau Says Sorry For Sarcastic Thank You Comment To Indigenous Protester

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 Mar, 2019 07:42 PM

    HALIFAX — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau apologized Thursday for his sarcastic retort to an Indigenous protester who interrupted a Liberal fundraising event the night before in Toronto.


    Trudeau said he's sorry for how he responded to the protester, who unfurled a banner at the foot of the stage in an effort to draw attention to the impact of mercury poisoning in the northern Ontario community of Grassy Narrows First Nation.


    "Thank you for your donation," Trudeau told the woman as she was escorted out by security. "I really appreciate your donation to the Liberal Party of Canada."


    Others in the audience, who paid $1,500 each in order to attend the event, cheered the prime minister's dismissive remark, which was captured by cellphone cameras and circulated on social media.


    Trudeau showed more contrition when asked about the confrontation Thursday.


    "As I think you all know, from time to time I'm in situations where people are expressing concerns or protesting a particular thing, and I always try to be respectful and always try to engage with them in a positive way," he said following an announcement in Halifax.


    "That's how I believe democracy should function, and I didn't do that last night. Last night I lacked respect towards them and I apologize for that."


    Any funds that the protesters contributed in order to gain access to the event will be refunded, he added.


    "They wanted to express their concerns about an issue and I do take that seriously and I apologize to them."


    Indigenous people in Grassy Narrows, about 90 kilometres north of Kenora, Ont., have been contending for decades with chemical-waste mercury dumped into the English-Wabigoon river system throughout the 1960s and 1970s, poisoning fish and locals who rely on the river as a source of water and food.


    The community hopes to build a world-class mercury treatment facility to help deal with the fallout from the poisoning, which causes often irreparable damage, including impaired vision, muscle weakness, speech, hearing and cognitive problems and and numbness or stinging pain in the extremities and mouth.


    Grassy Narrows staff met with former Indigenous Services Minister Jane Philpott in December to discuss progress on the facility, shortly after giving the government a feasibility study for the project. At that time Philpott said the government was actively working to get it built.


    Trudeau said he plans to follow up with Seamus O'Regan, who replaced Philpott on the Indigenous Services file in January, to "make sure we are looking at exactly everything we can do to continue to work hard in resolving this situation."


    "It is something that is of real concern and a real piece of the path of reconciliation that we must walk on."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'I Really Don't Need The Money': Halifax Man To Give Huge Poker Win To Charity

    HALIFAX — A Halifax man who won over US$671,000 at an international poker tournament in the Bahamas doesn't plan on keeping a single cent of his unlikely winnings.    

    'I Really Don't Need The Money': Halifax Man To Give Huge Poker Win To Charity

    No Cash Or Trial Delay: Judge Denies Requests From Couple Charged In Son's Death

    CALGARY — A judge on Friday refused requests from an Alberta couple charged in the meningitis death of their son to have their legal fees covered and a retrial delayed.

    No Cash Or Trial Delay: Judge Denies Requests From Couple Charged In Son's Death

    British Sailor Acquitted In Gang Rape Case At Halifax-Area Military Base

    British Sailor Acquitted In Gang Rape Case At Halifax-Area Military Base
    A young woman hurriedly left a courtroom Friday after a judge questioned her credibility and acquitted a British sailor accused in an alleged gang rape at a Halifax-area military base.    

    British Sailor Acquitted In Gang Rape Case At Halifax-Area Military Base

    High Court Ruling Allows Long-Term Expats To Vote In February Byelections

    High Court Ruling Allows Long-Term Expats To Vote In February Byelections
    Expat Canadians with ties to one of three ridings now in the throes of byelections may be eligible to vote no matter how long they've been abroad given last week's Supreme Court of Canada ruling.    

    High Court Ruling Allows Long-Term Expats To Vote In February Byelections

    Elderly Helmut Oberlander Again Appeals Stripping Of Citizenship

    A 94-year-old man found to have lied about his membership in a Second World War Nazi death squad has launched yet another appeal of the government's decision to strip him of his Canadian citizenship.    

    Elderly Helmut Oberlander Again Appeals Stripping Of Citizenship

    Trudeau Fields Questions At Town Hall Meeting In St-Hyacinthe, Que.

    Trudeau Fields Questions At Town Hall Meeting In St-Hyacinthe, Que.
    SAINT-HYACINTHE, Que. — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was challenged on climate change during the opening moments of a town hall meeting in Saint-Hyacinthe, Que.

    Trudeau Fields Questions At Town Hall Meeting In St-Hyacinthe, Que.