Mulroney on His Role Helping Trudeau, Despite Rivalry With PM’s Dad

Mulroney on His Role Helping Trudeau, Despite Rivalry With PM’s Dad
Former prime minister Brian Mulroney arrives with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to receive the insignia of Commander of the National Order of the Legion of Honour from the Embassy of France on Dec. 6, 2016, in Ottawa. The Canadian Press/Justin Tang
The Canadian Press
Updated:

WASHINGTON—In six simple words, former prime minister Brian Mulroney sweeps aside the glaring irony of his new political mission: assisting a Trudeau government, an assignment that will even see him participate in a cabinet session.

Mulroney once spent an entire chapter of his memoirs excoriating Pierre Trudeau—his personal nemesis, prime ministerial predecessor, and partisan rival. Yet his work with Trudeau’s son on the Canada-U.S. file culminated in an April 6 meeting with ministers on upcoming NAFTA renegotiations.

“That was then, now is now,” Mulroney said in an interview last week, when he was in Washington for the annual gathering of the Horatio Alger Society as it awarded scholarships to youth with troubled backgrounds.

“My wife and I have been friendly with the present prime minister—as has my family—for many years. He has always treated us with great courtesy and respect. He’s the one I deal with. He sets the tone.”

If we were ever to lose NAFTA you'd see grave challenges in Canadian society.
Former prime minister Brian Mulroney

The story of how Mulroney got involved in modern-day Canada-U.S. relations stretches back before the last federal election. But it really started the morning after Donald Trump’s ground-shaking election win.

Last Nov. 9, a group of government officials huddled to assess what had just happened, how it affected Canada, and what personal connections they might have to the incoming Trump team. There weren’t many. While the Liberals had multiple relationships with the Clinton team, there were scant points of contact with the political outsider who had just won the election.

There was one famous exception. In a community of moneyed Florida snowbirds, Mulroney had become friendly with Trump and was especially close to his incoming point man on NAFTA, Wilbur Ross. Even the Trump-Mulroney children had struck friendships.

“The name that kept coming up again and again was Prime Minister Mulroney’s,” said one person involved in the Nov. 9 talks. “Almost everybody we called with even a tangential relationship with Trump said Mulroney was the guy to talk to.”

Mulroney has since had several phone chats with Trudeau, that source said. He’s also volunteered in three ways: establishing connections, offering advice, and conveying one country’s perspective to the other. .

Mulroney wasn’t the only bridge-builder: Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland set up the initial meetings in New York between the Trudeau and Trump teams.

Mulroney credits everyone for making the most of these new connections.

“I can tell you I’ve heard from two leaders of the American administration ... telling me the Canadians ... were the best and the nicest people the Americans were able to deal with anyone around the world,” he said.

“How do I know that President Trump feels that he had a very good meeting with the prime minister and he liked him a lot? … Because he told me, at dinner. … They just hit it off. ... He liked the cut of his jib. He liked the way he spoke. He liked a lot of things.'’

Mulroney is equally laudatory of the opposition’s behaviour; he says Rona Ambrose and the Conservatives have lowered the partisan temperature on a critical issue of national interest, and sent a letter offering help wherever possible.

“This is a national challenge,” he said.

“If we were ever to lose NAFTA you'd see grave challenges in Canadian society. So in something like this there’s not a Conservative, or a Liberal way to look at this. There’s only a Canadian way.”

From The Canadian Press