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Justin Trudeau's Speech At Liberal 'Convention' (PHOTOS, FULL TEXT)

Trudeau Says CampaignAbout His Father

Justin Trudeau took to the stage at the Liberal leadership showcase Saturday and declared that his campaign is about his father after all.

In a speech titled "Hope and Hard Work," Trudeau responded to those who say he depends on nostalgia for his famous father to garner support.

"I know there are those who say this movement we're building is all about nostalgia, that's it's not really about me, or you, or Canada," Trudeau said. "Let's face it, they say it's about my father."

"To them I say this: it is. It is about my dad."

READ THE FULL TEXT

The Liberal leadership frontrunner elaborated that it's about the parents of all Canadians and the "legacy they left us, the country they built for us" and made reference to his father's convention victory in 1968, "exactly 45 years ago tonight."

While Trudeau acknowledged the importance of the past, he emphasized that progress is the "core value of the Liberal party."

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Reaching Out

Liberal Leadership Showcase: Justin Trudeau

Trudeau's performance at the convention overshadowed the speeches of his five competitors. Throughout the day, the audience at the mini-convention seemed as if it was at a library rather than a rally.

While B.C. MP Joyce Murray's entrance to a live performance of xylophones and drums generated some enthusiasm, her speech quickly dampened that energy.

Likewise for the speeches from Deborah Coyne, Karen McCrimmon, Martha Hall Findlay and Martin Cauchon.

Trudeau's walk to the stage, flanked by supporters and press, was more dramatic than those of his competitors and the assembled media jockeyed to catch photos and video of Trudeau's kiss with his wife Sophie.

Another highlight of Trudeau's speech was a reference to his heavily publicized tears in February after being presented with a print of a famous photo of his father carrying him like a football.

Trudeau talked about the man who gave him the photo, Constable Jeff Ling, son of the RCMP officer who appears in the image.

"What moved me was that here Jeff was, serving his country a generation later, with the same dedication and quiet pride as his father," Trudeau said. "In that moment, he evoked the thousands of Canadians I had the unique honour of growing up with. Men and women for whom service to Canada was its own reward."

Trudeau has emphasized that he is running a positive campaign, but that didn't stop him from taking swipes at both Stephen Harper and Thomas Mulcair.

"Mr. Mulcair and Mr. Harper are masters of the politics of division," Trudeau said. "They are content to exploit difference and disagreements to further their own interests."

"East against West, Quebec against the rest of Canada, the wealthy against the less fortunate, cities against regions."

But Trudeau saved his harshest criticism for the Conservatives.

"What is the Conservatives' economic message these days? That Canadians should be happy we don't live in Europe?" Trudeau asked to laughter from the audience.

Trudeau also attacked the government's tough-on-crime agenda.

"The Conservatives have forgotten about the value of service," Trudeau said. "The only time they talk about community service these days is when it's punishment for a crime."

If, as widely expected, Trudeau is announced at the new Liberal leader next Sunday in Ottawa it will be more than two years until he gets a chance to take Harper on in a federal election. The countdown to 2015 begins.

FULL TEXT

The following reflects the prepared remarks for Justin Trudeau's speech at the Liberal Leadership Showcase in Toronto April 6, 2013.

I stand before you a son of Quebec.

A grandson of British Columbia.

And a servant of Canada.

These Canadians you just met are a few of the thousands I’ve had the honour to meet, to talk with, and to learn from over the past 6 months.

Their stories are remarkable. Remarkable, because they are so common in Canada.

With hope and hard work, every day Canadians live the values that unite this country. Optimism, openness, compassion, service to community, generosity of spirit.

My friends, our party must be their party.

We must convince Chanchal that we share his work ethic, his desire to serve, his optimism about the future.

We must prove to Penny that we are in it for her. That we understand the burdens she carries, every day, to make life better for her kids, her neighbours, her community.

We must build with Justine and Ali a country worthy of their dreams and show them that Canadians across our land already share the same values as Quebecers: integrity, openness and community engagement.

To those who think that Canadians do not share common values, I encourage you to spend more time in this country. All of this country.

My fellow Liberals, my message to you is simple. To lead Canada, we must serve Canadians. And we must prove it with acts more than words. I say that not as a son who learned it from his father, but as a father who every day learns that from his kids.

The Conservatives have forgotten about the value of service. The only time they talk about “community service” these days is when it’s a punishment for a crime. And, anyway, the only person Mr Harper wants his caucus to serve is their leader.

Well, that’s not good enough. We need to be a party of community leaders, devoted to community service. That’s why I am calling for open nominations for all Liberal candidates in every single riding in the next election.

Mr Harper is showing us how governments grow out of touch. Canadians are getting tired of the negative, divisive politics of the Conservatives. And are disappointed that the NDP, with Mr Mulcair, has decided that if you can’t beat them, you might as well join them.

Mr. Mulcair and Mr. Harper are masters of the politics of division. They are content to exploit differences and disagreements to further their own interests.

East against West, Quebec against the rest of Canada, the wealthy against the less fortunate, cities against regions, and so on.

This is old politics. But in the short-term, it can work. It was how Mr. Harper’s government was elected.

We need to be better than that. We are an optimistic, hard-working, problem-solving people. Canadians want a positive alternative that brings new solutions, new ideas, and a new way of doing politics. I’m more convinced than ever, that if we work hard every day between now and then, the Liberal Party of Canada will be that positive choice in 2015.

So let me be perfectly clear on one point.

I want to be your leader because I want work with you, and with millions of Canadians, to build that positive alternative to the Conservatives. One that Canadians will choose freely because we will have earned their trust.

Canadians don’t just want a different government. They want a better government.

Those who think we need to win at any cost – whatever the means – are mistaken. It is a mistake to believe that just getting rid of this government will make all of Canada’s problems disappear.

This is a naive and simplistic way to approach our future.

We are facing real, and significant challenges.

Middle class Canadians have seen their incomes stall, while their costs go up, and their debts explode. Simply getting rid of Mr Harper will not get them their first real raise in 30 years.

Young Canadians will not get jobs just because Mr Harper is gone.

Quebecers will not automaticaly re-engage at the heart of our federation simply because Mr. Harper is no longer Prime Minister.

Our international reputation on the environment will not be restored the day after Mr. Harper leaves.

The truth is, Canadians want to vote for something, not just against somebody. They want to vote for a long term vision that embodies our values, our dreams and our aspirations.

They will not get that vision from a Frankenstein’s monster, at war with itself over fundamental issues like the Constitution, Natural Resources and Free Trade. It would fail in its primary goal: it would extend, not end, Mr Harper’s career.

From Ponoka Alberta, to Île-des-Chênes Manitoba to Edmunston New Brunswick, Canadians are hoping that we have learned that lesson. Over the course of this campaign, I began to describe for Canadians a vision of this country that is very, very different from this government’s.

Our highest economic objective will be prosperity for the middle class, and those Canadians who are working hard to join it. Our grounding principle will be equality of opportunity. Our agenda will develop our skills, support our vulnerable, attract investment, and expand trade.

It is a vision that embraces diversity. One that recognizes Canada is strong because of our differences, not in spite of them. One that believes deeply in federalism, balancing national priorities with regional and local means of meeting them.

A vision that sees newcomers to this country as community- and nation-builders; as citizens, not just employees, or a demographic to be mined for votes.

Ours is a vision that knows economic prosperity and environmental health can -- and must -- go hand in hand in the 21st century. We will not ignore science, or shy away from tough, urgent issues like carbon pricing. Nor will we succumb to easy politics by demonizing one sector of the economy or region of the country.

A Liberal Party led by me would never use western resources to buy eastern votes.

We will stand for national unity by offering Quebecers and all Canadians a progressive political project that rallies us all. We will be audacious and ambitious, because this country is greater than the sum of its parts.

Our foreign policy will promote peace, democracy and development. Canada must be a key player on the world stage, bringing forward positive debate and discussions – not divisive ones as is the case today.

My fellow Liberals, make no mistake about it. With me as your leader, you will get a clear, positive vision for Canada. We’ve begun to lay it out in this campaign. We’ve focused on the big issues like the prosperity of the middle class, a healthy democracy and sustainable economy.

It’s a vision that you and I are going to finish, together, with Canadians.

That is doing politics differently.

If we work hard and stay optimistic, we will put forward an irresistible alternative to the Conservatives 30 months from now. Irresistible not because it is Liberal, but because it will be 100%, undeniably Canadian.

It won’t be easy. Nothing worth doing ever is. But that is the path to victory in 2015.

Hope, my friends, yes. Always hope. But more than that. Hope and hard work.

You see, the biggest problem with Mr Harper’s government is not that they’re mean-spirited. It’s that they’re unambitious.

After all, what is the Conservatives’ economic message these days? That Canadians should be happy we don’t live in Europe?

What’s worse, the Conservatives use our challenges as opportunities to demonize their opponents and divide Canadians, not to find solutions.

It is up to us, the Liberal Party, to say that the Conservative way of doing politics is not good enough. Canadians are better than their politics, Canada deserves far better.

Now, there are those who ask me: what makes you think you can take this on?

To them, I say this: I have lived and breathed every square kilometre of this country from the day I was born. I’ve lived and worked in the east and the west, in French and in English. I am proud to have lifelong friends, colleagues and supporters from the Arctic archipelago to Point Pelee.

And I have met, talked with, and learned from more Canadians in the past six months than Mr Harper has in the past six years.

I have been open to Canadians my entire life. And because of that, I have a strong sense of this country. Where it has been, where it is, and where Canadians want it to go.

And what is it with Conservative attacks on teachers? They’ve never met a teacher they wouldn’t pick a fight with. I am fiercely proud to be one of the hundreds of thousands of Canadians who belong to the teaching profession. And let me tell you this, my friends, this teacher fully intends to fight back.

In closing, I want to share a story with you.

Many of you know that today marks an anniversary. Exactly forty-five years ago tonight, a gathering of Canadians made my father Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Many Canadians have approached me over the course of this campaign to share stories about my dad. So let me tell you a special one.

I met Constable Jeff Ling at Loyalist College in Belleville. It was at the end of a long morning. Constable Ling came up to the front of the room to give me a gift. I recognized it instantly. It was a picture of dad and me. You’ve probably seen it. I was about 2 years old and dad was hurrying up to Rideau Hall, with me tucked roughly under his arm.

Both Dad and I are looking at an RCMP officer. He’s dressed in full uniform and saluting us crisply.

That picture means as much to Jeff as it does to me. Because that officer was his father.

What moved me was that here Jeff was, serving his country a generation later, with the same dedication and quiet pride as his father. In that moment, he evoked the thousands of Canadians I had the unique honour of growing up with. Men and women for whom service to Canada was its own reward.

I know there are those who say this movement we’re building is all about nostalgia. That it’s not really about me, or you, or Canada. Let’s face it: they say that it’s about my father.

Well, to them I say this...

It is. It is about my Dad. And Constable Ling’s dad. And our mothers. And yours. It's about all of our parents and the legacy they left us. The country they built for us. Canada.

But we know now what they knew then. It’s more about the future than the past. It is always, in every instance, about our children more than our parents’ legacy.

That with hope and hard work, we can make progress happen. That we can leave a better country to our kids than we inherited from our parents.

Progress. That is the core value of the Liberal Party. That is why generations of Canadians, from every corner of our land, and every walk of life, poured their heart and their soul and their ideas and their sweat into our Party.

I said back in October that the Liberal Party didn’t create Canada. Canada created the Liberal Party. Well, the last six months have taught me that maybe, just maybe, Canadians are willing to do that again.

We can lead the change that so many Canadians want to make happen.

I’m asking you for your time, for your smarts, for your hope, and your hard work.

And this week, I’m asking for your vote to become the next leader of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Join me, join us, and our work will make us proud. Believe, now and always, in our country.

Thank you.

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