Wednesday, January 8, 2025

The seven key pieces of Justin Trudeau’s political legacy

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OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced Monday he will resign as prime minister and Liberal leader once the party chooses a successor. Trudeau, who was first elected Oct. 19, 2015, steps down after nearly a decade in power. Here are the key pieces of his political legacy.

Legalizing pot

On Oct. 17, 2018, cannabis became legal in Canada. Legalization sparked a new industry, with a domestic recreational market now valued in the billions. Cannabis legalization was one of the campaign promises Trudeau made in the 2015 election that saw him win a landslide majority government.

Andrew McDougall, an assistant professor in the department of political science at the University of Toronto, said cannabis legalization was “a political debate in Canada literally for decades.”

“While I think people are still fighting about the public health implications of that,” legalization is “here to stay,” he said.

“I think most people would point to that as being a success of the Trudeau government, something he promised to do, and it was a promise that he kept.”

Reneging on electoral reform

One key early pledge Trudeau did not keep was bringing about electoral reform. Speaking to reporters after his resignation, Trudeau said if he had one regret about his time in office, it would be reneging on that promise.

In 2015, Trudeau said that if he was elected, the federal election held that year would be the last to use the first-past-the-post method.

“I do wish that we had been able to change the way we elect our governments in this country, so that people could simply choose a second choice or a third choice on the same ballot,” he said Monday. He said that would have resulted in people “looking for things they have in common instead of trying to polarize and divide Canadians against each other.”

But Trudeau said it was something he “could not change unilaterally without support of other parties.”

Jennifer Wallner, an assistant professor in the school of political studies at the University of Ottawa, said Trudeau had a majority government in his first mandate, and could have made it happen.

“There would have been ways of doing it, and he certainly didn’t need all parties to be supporting it.”

Reconciliation

When it comes to Trudeau’s record on reconciliation, Wallner said “there’s no denying that this government has been oriented, at least symbolically, to transforming the relationship” with Indigenous Peoples.

McDougall said Trudeau did his “best to associate the Liberal party with reconciliation in a way that maybe it hadn’t been before.”

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