Obama Endorses Canada’s Trudeau For Re-election

Hamilton Nwosa
Writer

Ad

Why Wike Should Resign or Be Sacked: A Call to Organized Civil Society in Nigeria to Uphold Anti-corruption Standards with Consistency, By Frank Tietie

By Frank Tietie The revelations by Nigerian social crusader, investigative journalist, and activist Omoyele Sowore regarding the current Minister of the Federal Capital Territory, Nyiesome Wike, are serious and warrant the attention of all Nigerians who care about the integrity of the country. Sowore has alleged that Wike laundered funds and concealed the purchase of…

Dangote Refinery Slams PENGASSAN, Describes Order as ‘Economic Sabotage’

By Abiola Olawale In an escalating labor showdown, the Dangote Petroleum Refinery has fired back at the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria (PENGASSAN), criticising the latter’s order on Saturday. This is as the refinery owned by Africa’s richest person, Alhaji Aliko Dangote described PENGASSAN's order to cut crude oil and gas…

Intimate Affairs: ‘I don’t want a mother-in-law,’ By Funke Egbemode

By Funke Egbemode Tola doesn’t wish anybody dead. She just doesn’t want to go through what her mother went through in the hands of her grandmother. She had been told that she might just be lucky and end up with a husband with a kind mother. But she’s scared, I believe, irredeemably, by the trauma…

Ad

Former US president Barack Obama has endorsed Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for re-election.

Mr Obama tweeted that “the world needs his progressive leadership now” and that he hoped Canadians would back Mr Trudeau’s Liberal party.

Canadians vote on 21 October and opinion polls suggest a tight race.

The Obama-Trudeau “bromance” made headlines after the Canadian PM was honoured with an official state dinner in Washington.

They continued their friendship after Mr Obama left office in 2017.

Mr Obama’s tweet has attracted criticism from those who say it is “foreign interference” in Canada’s election. Elections Canada, which oversees the country’s elections, told the BBC that foreign citizens were welcome to express their opinion on Canada’s elections.

“Whether expenses were incurred, who incurred them and for what reason would be among the factors that need to be considered before determining if undue foreign influence has taken place,” said Elections Canada spokeswoman Natasha Gauthier.

Drew Fagan, a professor of public policy at the Munk School of Global Affairs, said the endorsement was “unusual”.

“There is a tradition of non-intervention,” he said. “The sensitivity in this case is because our ties are so close and yet the power imbalance is so great.”

Mr Fagan says he cannot think of a president or former president endorsing a Canadian candidate, although President Clinton did give a forceful speech against Quebec separatism in Ottawa in 1995.

Mr Obama is very popular in Canada, and his endorsement could make a real impact on this close race, he says.

“Obama himself now could become an issue in this campaign,” he said.

Presentational white space

This is not Mr Obama’s first time endorsing a foreign candidate. He endorsed Emmanuel Macron during the 2017 French election.

And while he was still in office, shortly after President Donald Trump was elected, he told media in Berlin that if he were German, he would vote for Chancellor Angela Merkel.

In 2015, during the Brexit campaign, Mr Obama told the BBC that he supported Remain, provoking outcry from Leave supporters.

Mr Obama has yet to endorse a candidate in the 2020 US Democratic primary, including his former Vice-President Joe Biden.

Mr Trudeau did not endorse any US candidate in the 2016 election.

His opponent, NDP leader Jagmeet Singh, did get a popularity boost when superstar Rihanna followed him on Instagram.

Ad

Unlocking Opportunities in the Gulf of Guinea during UNGA80
X whatsapp