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- THE POLITICS OF MY WAY
-
- Unlike the United States, with its generalissimo politics-Washington, Jackson,
- Grant, Eisehower- the martial arts have been conspicuously absent from Canadian
- politics. But there in one exception: in 1968 Pierre Elliot Trudeau became the first
- Canadian leader to bring the gunslinger-Lone Ranger ethos to Canadian politics.
- Trudeau introduced to Canada the refined art of single combat; it was the
- politics of "Doing It My Way"-the politics of going my way or being left behind.
- Single-combat confrontation implied much mor than the loner or renegade in power, and
- far far less than the shaman black tricks of Mackenzie King. Trudeau was always far
- more the solo Philosopher King engaged in intellectual trial by combat than the Magus
- Merlin conjuring up solutions by puffs of smoke, sleight of hand or divine
- intervention. Ouijaboard politics was the occult domain of Mackenzie King, a man
- virtually devoid of policy, a political palm reader forever checking the whims and
- moods of his powerful baronial-Ralston Howe, St. Laurent-and sometimes Byronian
- colleagues to see how best he could placate them, or calm them, or Heap his beatitudes
- upon them.
- Trudeau, from day one , was always more samurai than shaman. Even in his pre-
- leadership days, Trudeau's love of trial by combat was predominant. Mackenzie King
- would have never touched the unholy trinity of divorce, abortion and homosexuality:
- each one of these issues is a sleeping dog best left to lie; each could only infuriate
- conservative Canada from coast to coast. Since King dared not touch them seriatim
- he certainly would not have touched them together-in an omnibus bill.
- This, Trudeau did joyously. The myths-makers have it at this was Trudeau's
- first deliberated joust, the kingship being the final prize. But Trudeau had no
- leadership aspirations at the time; all that he had, still has, was the love of combat
- for the sake of combat and religious scruples be damned. Trudeau the Catholic zealot
- tackle divorce, abortion and homosexuality active Prime Minister in this country's
- history, liberated the homosexual practitioners of black acts totally abhorrent to
- him; ironically, in the process, Trudeau gave irrational Canada a pretext for branding
- him a homosexual too.
- P.E.T. has always hated the consensus building of Mackenzie King; even the
- populist following of a Diefenbaker was an anathema to Trudeau. The single-combat
- warrior "doing it my way" is always alone; he leads the people but is not of them;
- like the prophet he wanders either in dessert or lush green pastures and often, like
- the prophet, he watches his people march into the Promised Land without him. For
- Trudeau, being alone is to be free; victory is a consequence of solitude;
- companionship an act of weakness, cronyism even wise.
- It is ironic that Trudeau, a devout Jansenist Roman Catholic, emotionally and
- philosophically opposed to both divorce and abortion, should grant Canadians greatly
- expanded divorce rights and their first right to legale abortion.
- Trudeau took the unholy trinity then disturbing the bedrooms of the nation
- because all three were trial combat, all three required one strong man to push them
- through. In this minefield Canada's political loner had walked alone and apparently
- loved it.
- Canada's other solo flyer, John Diefenbaker, may or may not have been a renegade
- in power, but the input his holitics received from Senate cronies and Kitchen cabinets
- was enormous. The letters and advice that daily poured in to the chief were a
- populist input that Diefenbaker slavishly adhered to. Trudeau was no Diefenbaker;
- he was neither a populist nor a renegade. Trudeau was simply a man who brilliantly
- massaged and manipulated others so that his single will appeared to be the will of
- many, so that his will be always done.
- The theme of my-way politics sheds much light on the vrai Trudeau, the Trudeau
- that is, rather than the Trudeau people think there is. Trudeau has never been the
- privacy-demanding recluse, the reluctant leader that herdsmen of Canadian journalism
- insist he is.
- In secular life Trudeau is no trinitarian; he has chosen his oneness because,
- from the earliest politics, oneness worked for him so spectacular. Trudeau's personal
- handling of the constriction crisis was a "my way" all the way. Trudeau, the self-
- proclaimed socialist prophet of his people, waxed ever so eloquently against the sins
- of conscription, and yet Trudeau seemingly could not see in War measures that
- potential greater evil of a Canadian fascism that surly meant permanent conscription
- and enslavement of all. Equally puzzling is the referral of Trudeau's nationalist
- compatriots and colleagues in the years since to give him any credit for fighting in
- 1942 a good nationalist fight on behalf of the anti-conscription, quasi-separatist
- candidacy of Jean Drapeau; not so puzzling in the refusal of Angelo Saxon patriots
- to give Trudeau any credit at all for joining a reserve regiment before the war.
- There was both a typical Trudeau "a plague on both your houses" in all this, and even
- more of the gunslinger spraying bullets on both side of the saloon bar.
- The style of the lone gunslinger was already apperant in Trudeau's early radical
- posture. Cite libre was a radical editorial collective run completely by Trudeau.
- Trudeau the then internationalist and socialist shared ideological bed and board with
- David Lewis, Frank Scott, Eugene Forsey and Theresa Casgrain, but only Trudeau's CCF
- and NDP membership cards mysteriously do not exist today. Even that minor bit of
- collectivist discipline, the proud possession of a party card, was abhorrent to the
- free-wheeling independent Trudeau.
- The ideologically committed gunslinger found little in the democratic process
- to nourish him. The social democratic Trudeau first entered the electoral lists only
- only in the safest Liberal seat in the country. Trudeau knew that group dynamic,
- group participation, in not ideologically and politically effective as when the few
- shape the many.
- This single-warrior syndrome explains many shifts and patterns in the Trudeau
- character. Diefenbaker revelled in the democratic panorama; Diefenbaker failed to
- keep urban Canada aboard his carousel and never really got french Canada aboard in
- the first place, but the Chief's strengths and weakness flowed from the ordinary
- people who loved him and the sophisticates and big city people who hated him. P.E.T.
- never did deal in democratic norms; instead, the elitist Trudeau gave Quebec's
- elitists the first crack at the bilingual club and transformed the federal
- bureaucracy, at least on its highest levels, to be a bilingual workplace in which the
- frankphone would be supreme.
- INTRO
-
- Canada, and its record of careful middle-of-the-road politics has
- produced leaders who were careful and middle-of-the-road as well, until
- 1968 when Canada and the world was introduced to Prime Minister Pierre
- Elliot Trudeau.
- He had walked and cycled through Europe, and been on the wrong
- side of the bars in foreign jails. Not your average guy. Not your
- average Prime Minister.
- The future Prime Minister was the second child and the elder son
- of the family. He was born on October 18th, 1919. At a very young age
- Trudeau was the current, attacking authority and not giving a "DAMN"
- for the public opinion.
- In 1940 Prime Minister Trudeau entered the law faculty at the
- University of Montreal. He says that he hesitated between law &
- psychology, but had to settle for law since Montreal didn't offer
- psychology and the war kept him in Canada.
- As a student he enlisted in the Canadian officers Training Corps.
- He was given a commission on a lieutenant, a rank he held until his
- retirement in 1947. LIFE
- Joseph Philippe Pierre Elliote Trudeau to say his names in order
- was born an October 18, 1919. Pierre wasn't the sort of person that
- you think would become one of Canada's longest in office Prime
- Ministers.
- At home Pierre's mother spoke mainly English, although she was
- fluent in french. His mother provided the English balance. Charles-
- Emily Pierre's father taught him sports as Pierre was very good at
- them. Pierre practised the art of KARATE and soon became a brown belt,
- one below black belt. He also knew how to skin dive and could descend
- 150 feet off a cliff and come out without a scratch. Other than
- teaching Pierre sports, Charles-Emile also put together a franchise of
- gas stations that grew to include 15,000 members and filling $1,400,000
- for his stations.
- As a boy, living in Montreal, he favoured the English instead of
- the French and when his friends were unhappy of the French losing,
- Pierre was celebrating. Many of his teachers in primary school said
- that Pierre was a headstrong individualist who involved himself
- frequently in fights and practical jokes. In 1924 or 1925 Charles-
- Emily, Pierre father died, and Pierre was only fourteen years old at
- the time. Since his parents were so rich he got driven to school by a
- chauffeur and ran with a crowd called LES SNOBS. As a student Pierre
- joined the COTC, Canadian Officers Training Corps. Pierre lack of self
- discipline got him into trouble a lot and he was soon kicked out of the
- COTC. Pierre didn't always get into trouble actually as he was a very
- smart kid and one of his teachers commented that Pierre was a pupil who
- was good at every subject. In 1940 Pierre entered the law faculty at
- the University of Montreal.