Trudeau Uses World Stage to Promote the Value of Diversity

Trudeau Uses World Stage to Promote the Value of Diversity
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau delivers a speech at Canada House in London on Nov.25, 2015. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Adrian Wyld
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LONDON—Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is using the international stage and a London audience to pitch his Syrian refugee plan as an example of Canada’s unique diversity to the world.

“We have a responsibility—to ourselves and to the world—to show that inclusive diversity is a strength and a force that can vanquish intolerance, radicalism, and hate,” Trudeau told a well-heeled crowd at Canada House in central London on Nov. 25.

A day after his government revealed its hotly debated plans for bringing 25,000 refugees to Canada from the devastating, years-long civil war in Syria, Trudeau made an impassioned and highly political appeal that plumbed many of the themes of the October election that vaulted his Liberals to power.

The message provided a sobering counterpoint to his morning audience with the Queen, where Trudeau presented his two youngest children, Ella-Grace and Hadrien, just as his own prime minister father, Pierre, had once introduced a young Trudeau to the monarch.

The Buckingham Palace visit leavened what is proving to be another heavy week of international diplomacy for the freshly minted Canadian leader.

With the Syrian refugee file on the boil, events in the Middle East continue to spiral following the downing of a Russian fighter jet this week by Turkish forces.

The Buckingham Palace visit leavened what is proving to be another heavy week of international diplomacy for the freshly minted Canadian leader.