Trudeau defends record on Indigenous issues, as stump speech mentions are brief
WINNIPEG — Justin Trudeau highlighted the push for reconciliation with First Nations, Metis and Inuit at a rally Saturday night, an issue he has otherwise rarely raised when encouraging progressive voters to stick with him when they head to the polls Monday.
“We are doing it in a way that is grounded in respect and partnership, because that’s what Indigenous Canadians deserve from their government,” Trudeau said Saturday night in Winnipeg, where nearly 2,000 people attended a rally at the Punjab Cultural Centre.
As prime minister, Trudeau said often that no relationship was more important to him than the one between Canada and Indigenous Peoples — language he included in the preamble to the mandate letters he sent to each of his cabinet ministers.
The first Liberal budget, in 2016, committed nearly $8.4 billion over five years to improving the lives and socio-economic conditions of Indigenous Peoples and their communities, which was hailed at the time as an unprecedented investment aimed at meeting high expectations.