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Hardcover Trideau's Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Pierre Elliott Trudeau Book

ISBN: 0679309543

ISBN13: 9780679309543

Trideau's Shadow: The Life and Legacy of Pierre Elliott Trudeau

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

A fresh look at the nation's formative years through the lens of the clash between Washington and Jefferson. This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Canada's Madison, Lincoln and Kennedy all in one!

Pierre Elliott Trudeau was Canada's James Madison, Abraham Lincoln and John F. Kennedy all in one. This is not crystal clear from the perspective of the Canadian essayists who contributed to TRUDEAU'S SHADOW, but reading this book from the perspective of a U.S. citizen I got the impression that the Canadians may not have always fully appreciated what they had.Trudeau was Canada's Prime Minister for nearly 16 years. He was elected in the late 1960's during a wave of "Trudeaumania" where the politician was received (and dressed) like a rock star. This aspect of Trudeau's idiom - his celebrity raised the hopes of many (some of whom would eventually be disappointed when Trudeau turned out to be a human public official after all). Trudeau's charisma/inspiration invites comparison to Kennedy, but his similarity t American presidents does not end there.Trudeau's vision of Canada was inseparably linked to the struggle for his native Quebec to find its place either within or outside the larger country. Trudeau defied separatists and believed that Canada should be a country in which all Canadians would feel at home everywhere. So, while he opposed separatism, he promoted bilingualism and promoted French-Canadians within his government. But some Quebec separatists would not be satiated. The movement actually got violent in 1970 as radicals launched a brief campaign of terror.The terrorism was brief because Trudeau clamped down swiftly and decisively. Although noted as a civil libertarian, Trudeau invoked the War Measures Act and sent tanks into the streets of Montreal. Though these actions have eventually come to be viewed as heavy handed, they also worked. Quebec separatism ceased being violent ever since. Though a few violent radicals is vastly different than a huge, organized region like the southern U.S. states that formed the Confederacy during the American Civil War, I could not help think of Lincoln while reading about Trudeau. Who knows where the separatist movement would have led had Trudeau not established the parameters of acceptable protest activity early on. As great a president as Lincoln was, imagine how much greater he would have been had he figured out an essentially non-violent was to end slavery and keep the country together. This is what Trudeau did (perhaps, had Lincoln done the same, the significance of his achievement would have been under-appreciated).One of the writers in TRUDEAU'S SHADOW, Guy Pratte, also compares Trudeau to Lincoln, but he makes a less favorable comparison. Lincoln, according to Pratte, was more practical than Trudeau, willing to do whatever it took to save the union. Trudeau had his unity plan and stuck to it, often poking Quebec separatists in the eye, thus emboldening them. The only problem with this view is that Canada has remained united, the separatist movement has been rejected at the polls time and time again, and again, violence is not one of the ways the conflict plays out.Where Pratte s
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