Conservative MP questions whether Trudeau’s apologies are sincere
OTTAWA — Conservative MP Marilyn Gladu says that while she supports Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s decision to apologize for Canada turning away Jewish refugees fleeing the Holocaust in 1939, the number of apologies he’s delivered makes people question his sincerity.
“I think it’s worth apologizing for it, but you can have dilution in recognition when you start apologizing, apologizing, apologizing. It makes it less special,” said Gladu.
Canada seems to be the “apology capital of the world” right now, said Rhoda Howard-Hassmann, a professor emeritus of political science from Wilfrid Laurier University. She said if Trudeau makes too many apologies, people may call it silly, but on the other hand, if he apologizes to one group and not the other, it leaves people behind.
In 2010, the then-mayor of Halifax, Peter Kelly, apologized for the destruction of Africville, a north-end community the city bulldozed over 40 years ago. Howard-Hassmann pointed out that while Kelly apologized for the specific incident, people of African descent in Canada overall have not been given an official apology.