Prime Minister Justin Trudeau assailed New Brunswick91Ƶs premier and other conservative leaders on Thursday, calling out the provincial government91Ƶs position on abortion, LGBTQ youth and climate change.
During a news conference in Caraquet, N.B., Trudeau delivered his attack in response to a question about whether he would be campaigning with the New Brunswick Liberals ahead of the upcoming provincial election, which has to be held by October.
Despite his desire to 91Ƶwork with any government91Ƶ in Canada, the prime minister said, 91ƵI do have issues with the current government of New Brunswick.91Ƶ
He said Progressive Conservative Premier Blaine Higgs doesn91Ƶt respect a 91Ƶwoman91Ƶs right to choose.91Ƶ The prime minister was referring to a New Brunswick regulation that prohibits public funding for abortions administered outside hospitals, a rule that was blamed for the closure earlier this year of Clinic 554, a private care provider in Fredericton.
The closure of that clinic, Trudeau said, and 91Ƶthe unwillingness to engage in allowing women to actually choose what happens to their future and their bodies is a disgrace.91Ƶ
91ƵI will continue to call out the government of New Brunswick and any conservative leader who continues to go after women91Ƶs rights.91Ƶ
Higgs91Ƶs office did not return a request for comment. But the province has said that two-thirds of all abortions in New Brunswick are administered with a pill 91Ƶ Mifegymiso 91Ƶ which is publicly funded. Surgical abortions are also funded by the province and offered at two hospitals in Moncton and one in Bathurst.
Trudeau then brought up the 2022 decision by the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn the constitutional right to an abortion in that country, saying Canada could suffer similar restrictions if conservatives are in power.
Restrictions on abortion, Trudeau said, are 91Ƶmore likely to happen in Canada, particularly with conservative leaders who continue to not stand up for women91Ƶs rights.91Ƶ
The prime minister also criticized the Higgs government91Ƶs changes to the provincial policy on gender identity in schools. The revised policy requires teachers to have parental consent before they can use the preferred names and pronouns of transgender and nonbinary students under 16.
Trudeau said Higgs and other conservatives in the country are trying to score political points off 91Ƶincredibly vulnerable91Ƶ transgender and nonbinary children.
Finally, Trudeau lashed out at Higgs91Ƶs calls for the removal of the federal carbon price, saying the premier wanted to 91Ƶscrap91Ƶ Canada91Ƶs fight against climate change.
Lyndsay Armstrong, The Canadian Press