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  • Marwan Bishara
    Marwan Bishara “Once again, the US's veto demonstrated a policy of it's my way or the highway. Palestine could only be a country the way the United States sees it, or Israel sees it, only at the time that it's suitable to the United States and within the geopolitics and the global interest of the United States. The US is sacrificing the freedom of Palestinian people for egotistical and narrow interests of the United States and Israel.” 7 hours ago
  • Brad Setser
    Brad Setser “Tariffs are currently 7.5 percent on electric vehicle battery packs but 25 percent on the components of those packs. The lower rate should be raised. China had long steered its subsidies to companies that manufacture and source their products in China - and sometimes had required those companies to be Chinese-owned. In order to build up industrial sectors where China has a first-mover advantage and now a cost advantage you need to have an insulated market - and to use some of the tools that China has already used.” 10 hours ago
  • Lael Brainard
    Lael Brainard “China's policy-driven overcapacity poses a serious risk to the future of the American steel and aluminum industry. China cannot export its way to recovery. China is simply too big to play by its own rules.” 10 hours ago
  • Ruth Harris
    Ruth Harris “War is a physical human endeavour and you have a force that is utterly exhausted, not slightly fatigued. It's a heavily attritional war. It's messy, it's bloody, there is nothing glorious about this. The glide bombs that are currently used are hugely devastating. They're cheap to make. They are pretty damn accurate and they can be adapted really quickly. They are fast and [the Russians] have a lot of them. This is a war of mass cost and pace. That's the operational factor on the ground.” 15 hours ago
  • Ali Vaez
    Ali Vaez “We are in a situation where basically everybody can claim victory. Iran can say that it took revenge, Israel can say it defeated the Iranian attack and the United States can say it successfully deterred Iran and defended Israel. If we get into another round of tit for tat, it can easily spiral out of control, not just for Iran and Israel, but for the rest of the region and the entire world.” 15 hours ago
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#Justin Trudeau

Page with all the IPSEs stored in the archive with the tag #Justin Trudeau linked to them.
The IPSEs are presented in chronological order based on when the IPSEs have been pronounced.

“Everything we discussed has been leaked to the paper; that's not appropriate. If there is sincerity, we can communicate well with mutual respect, otherwise the outcome will not be easy to tell.”

author
President of the People's Republic of China
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“We need to continue to press for real action, which is uncomfortable for many politicians, including Justin Trudeau. But between being politically uncomfortable and saying to our children, 'We can't guarantee you a livable world,' I don't think we have any choice.”

author
Green Party parliamentary leader
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“Mr. Trudeau, there is a lot I want to say, but you don't know me. My voice may shake a little ... but I need you to listen and I want you to hear my voice. I am mourning for our language, culture, traditions that I'm so desperately trying to reclaim and teach my daughter before it's too late.”

author
Canadian Indigenous person speaking at ceremony
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“Today was an absolute victory for First Nation children. For six years Justin Trudeau spent millions fighting the rights of Indigenous children and trying to overturn a ruling that found his government guilty of 'wilful and reckless' discrimination against vulnerable Indigenous kids. The court has thrown his case out.”

author
Canadian politician - Opposition New Democratic Party parliament member
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“Five weeks ago, Mr Trudeau asked for a majority. Tonight, Canadians did not give Mr Trudeau the majority mandate he wanted. In fact, Canadians sent him back with another minority at the cost of $600m. Our support has grown, it's grown across the country, but clearly there is more work for us to do to earn the trust of Canadians. My family and I are resolutely committed to continuing this journey for Canada.”

author
Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
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“Trudeau [Justin Trudeau] had one aim: win a majority. He failed. Last night's sharp rebuke is the second time in less than two years that many Canadians have, in effect, told him that his youthful, inconsequential sheen has lost much of its allure. As such, they were disinclined to grant him the broad mandate he was, no doubt, confident he would secure. So, today, the Canadian Parliament mirrors, almost to a seat, the Parliament that was dissolved a touch over a month ago to satiate Trudeau's irresistible yearning for the elusive prize of a majority.”

author
Al Jazeera columnist based in Toronto
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“There are actually millions of Canadians who are very frustrated with Mr. Trudeau. If they allow that frustration to do anything other than vote Conservative, they're voting for Mr. Trudeau. There are five parties and there are two choices. More of the same with Mr. Trudeau or real change and ethical government with Canada's Conservatives. If Justin Trudeau is rewarded for calling a $600 million election in the middle of a pandemic, everything you've come to dislike about Mr. Trudeau - the lectures, the division in this country, the hypocrisy, the rising prices - they will all only get worse. There is a lot a stake.”

author
Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
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“When Afghanistan was falling there were 1,200 Canadians and hundreds more translators and others waiting for help from Canada. Mr Trudeau [Justin Trudeau] should not have called this election, you should have gotten the job done in Afghanistan.”

author
Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
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“The global anti-vax movement is evolving and melding with a much darker, a much more violent, strain of anti-government sentiment. You're starting to see that real dark underbelly, and I think that's what you're seeing with Trudeau. He has come out in favour obviously of vaccines, of mandatory vaccines, of talking about vaccine passports, and this seems to have tapped into that anger.”

author
History professor at King’s University College and a specialist on conspiracy theories and extremism
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“It's really anti-Trudeau; it's not anti-Liberal, it's not just anti-state, it really is almost ad hominem attacks on Trudeau. Far-right groups have been able to co-opt and exploit mainstream concerns around the coronavirus and weave them into their own narrative. There are multiple intersecting sentiments coalescing and it is a loose coalition, it appears that there's no sort of central organising force [behind the recent protests]. It's a bunch of individuals connected by those anxieties and connected by the targeting of Trudeau.”

author
Professor at Ontario Tech University and director of the Centre on Hate, Bias and Extremism
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“[The Liberals have] been ahead of the Conservatives for a very long time … but if you look at seat projections it's basically like you flip a coin and maybe 50-50 [chance] they will get a majority. [Trudeau's gamble] is far from certain.”

author
McGill University professor and director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada
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“The so-called support from the US and its allies further proved that those countries have been colluding with each other on containing China, which only makes the situation worse as China will not yield to political coercion. Trudeau is in an embarrassing position given the current dilemma with two Michaels [Michael Spavor, Michael Kovrig], facing opposition domestically and internationally, which shows that he lacks political wisdom. If he can't properly handle this dilemma, it would only cast a shadow over the upcoming election.”

author
Professor at the Institute of International Relations at the China Foreign Affairs University
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“Trudeau should know his government's choice of being a US running dog is the reason behind the frosty bilateral ties and following allies' steps to pressure China won't put an end to the dilemma of the China-Canada relationship. Canada's attempt to pressure China by using 'Megaphone Diplomacy' or ganging up is totally futile and will only head toward a dead end.”

author
Director of Fudan University’s Centre for American Studies
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“The pandemic isn't over. Calling an election is selfish. PM Trudeau can bring his Ministers back from the pre-campaign trail, recall the House and get to work. I've written him reminding him that New Democrats are ready to return to Parliament and keep fighting for Canadians.”

author
Canadian Member of Parliament leader of the New Democratic Party
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“My biggest concern right now is the potential fourth wave of COVID-19. We shouldn't be rushing to an election. Mr. Trudeau always seems to put his own self-interest ahead of the interest of Canadians.”

author
Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
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“Turning to Covax demonstrates the desperation of the Trudeau government in terms of its vaccine policy. Taking [vaccine supply] from a multilateral institution that was designed particularly to help the world's poor is shocking and an embarrassment.”

author
University of Toronto professor focused on global access to medicines
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“Has @JustinTrudeau 'expressed concern' about the peaceful protests in Hong Kong? Thailand? Poland? France? Bangladesh? And the many countries which have seen protests in the last few weeks? Or is he interested in defending the rights of only politically relevant groups?”

author
Journalist - Executive Editor at WION News
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“We’re in the middle of a second wave. Ontario and Quebec are getting hit particularly hard. This is not where he wants to be at all. He’s commiserating with people; he feels our pain and it’s his pain too. We’re seeing political leaders in Canada use more blunt, plain language. Not because it’s overtly strategic, but because we’re in a crisis and we’re stuck here and we hate it.”

author
Professor of political science at Dalhousie university
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