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    Ayman Safadi “Tremendous effort has been made to produce an exchange deal that'll release hostages and realize a ceasefire. Hamas has put out an offer. If Netanyahu genuinely wants a deal, he will negotiate the offer in earnest. Instead, he is jeopardizing the deal by bombing Rafah.” 16 hours ago
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#Trudeau

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

“Guilbeault's [Steven Guilbeault] appointment is not the only signal Trudeau's government sent on climate with its new cabinet appointments this week. Canada's former environment minister, Jonathan Wilkinson, was named the new minister of natural resources. That role had previously been held by a Seamus O'Regan who championed fossil fuel interests. He [O'Regan] was a disaster in my view. He was the inside man for the oil and gas industry in cabinet and had been holding back progress on the environment.”

author
Professor of political science at the University of Alberta
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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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“Even if this election hadn't happened, he's been prime minister for six years - and there's only so long you can be in power before voter fatigue sets in. If he's willing to work with Singh, he can be prime minister who delivers a national childcare program, and be the one who delivers a real plan in place on climate change - something that has the support of multiple parties. If he wants it, there's a real opportunity here for Trudeau. It's a chance for him to cement a legacy.”

author
Professor of political science at Dalhousie University
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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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“No matter how popular a politician is, the longer he or she is in office, the more things will stick to him or her. Trudeau has been at the centre of a few high-profile scandals, and people's affection for him is no longer what it was - although he still has a loyal support base.”

author
President of the Angus Reid Institute a Vancouver-based polling firm
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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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“I have often said that Canada needs an “eyes wide open” approach to China, in order to see the country as it is and not as corporate lobbyists would like it to be. While Trudeau bases his views on what he has been told by these circles, I have based my views on my own experiences: as a lawyer who investigated counterfeiting and other intellectual property issues based out of China; as a veteran who has been watching China’s military expansion and its ambitions in the Arctic; and as a Canadian who believes that we cannot ignore human rights abuses and bad conduct just because we want to grow our exports.”

author
Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada
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