Trudeau’s new feminist foreign policy welcomed by new women envoys
OTTAWA — The Liberal government’s new feminist foreign policy could help it break new ground in international affairs when it assumes the G7 presidency next year, says Germany’s ambassador to Canada.
Sabine Sparwasser says the policy will be a key Canadian priority, one that could help it make a new mark on international affairs, similar to past breakthroughs such as the Ottawa treaty to ban landmines and the United Nations’ Responsibility to Protect doctrine.
“You make that a subject — and it is going to be a big subject of the Canadian G7 presidency — I think this is going to resonate in the world,” Sparwasser said Wednesday night in a wide-ranging panel discussion on international gender politics that included the newly arrived female envoys from France and the United Kingdom.
Four of Canada’s six G7 partner countries are now for the first time represented in Canada by women, including Kelly Craft, the new U.S. ambassador, who presented her credentials on Monday.