Trudeau makes subtle reference to landmark foreign policy speech given at U of T
Speaking at the ÖŰżÚζSM yesterday, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau described Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freelandâs first major speech â in which she espoused a global outlook â as a âsequelâ to a 70-year-old lecture delivered by her predecessor, Louis St-Laurent.
Read about Trudeau at U of T
Canadian history buffs might have gotten the reference, which has its own U of T connection.
Although Trudeau got the date wrong, it was an unmistakeable reference to St-Laurentâs Gray Lecture, delivered in U of Tâs largest classroom, Convocation Hall, according to historian and U of T professor Robert Bothwell.
Hereâs what Trudeau told the The New York Times at U of T on Thursday:
âIn 1948, Louis St-Laurent gave a speech defining Canada as having an independent foreign policy from Britain at that point that said, for which Canadian foreign policy was just an extension of British foreign policy, and since that moment we have always had an independent-minded foreign policy. Obviously weâre broadly aligned with many of our friends and values but the choices we make have always been based on Canadian values, Canadian priorities, a Canadian approach to solving problems.â
In January 1947, St-Laurent, then minister of external affairs, spoke at U of T, plotting an independent Canadian foreign policy based on principles such as the rule of law and a âwillingness to accept international responsibilities.â
The Gray Lecture was endowed by George Gray in the memory of his sons, Duncan and John.
Bothwell says Freelandâs speech on June 6 is a direct descendent of St-Laurentâs speech.
âItâs a sequel. It rings some of the same chimes,â he said. âThe Gray Lecture defines Canada as a liberal democratic state and defines Canadian values and how they should be expressed in foreign policy.â
âThatâs exactly what Freeland did. The structure, the ideology is the same.â
While Bothwell usually considers ministerial speeches a âstep above the phone bookâ in terms of their interest value, he plans to add Freelandâs to his syllabus.
Was he disappointed that Trudeau was a year off?
âOh no, I just took a grade off his talk,â he said.