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This Isn't Your Grandmother's Liberal Party

A new culture and mindset is emerging where entitlement is being exorcised from the Liberal Party of Canada's DNA. Trudeau personifies a new attitude: Canada and the national interest are coming first. The country seems to believe -- with good reason -- that Justin Trudeau and this renewed party, free of its black eyes and self-doubt, is in this for the right reasons and for a noble purpose.
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Despite whatever neurosis may be at play (and there's a lot), at the heart of any politician is a profound desire to serve their community and country.

I was no exception. Although the increasing coarseness of our public life has greatly diminished the respect with which we hold our democratic institutions, I hold steadfast to the conviction that elected office is a profoundly noble and important calling.

As a senior ministerial advisor in the mid-1980s, I observed how rewarding being a member of cabinet and parliament could be. This truth is I wanted to be one of them when I grew up.

At age 48, I tried, but didn't get there.

While I don't have the temperament of a "natural politician", I felt that once I got over the hurdle of getting elected, I would make a pretty good parliamentarian. The hard reality is that getting elected is job one for any aspiring politician.

I thought I was a hotshot. After all, I was born and raised in a Quebec working class family and became "self-made." I've read widely, travelled to over 50 countries in the world, am fluently bilingual, been to every corner of Canada many times, and have lived in British Columbia for over a decade. My professional life has been varied and substantial. I have more than my share of battle scars and have seen both big success and big failure up close.

I ran as a Liberal because that's my philosophical natural home. I identify myself as a pragmatic centrist. I am a free-enterpriser with a strong sense of social justice; believe that strengthening national unity is an enduring imperative, and am an internationalist. I am a staunch supporter of the Charter of Rights, believe in a robust federal government that promotes and defends the national interest, and reason that there is no inherent contradiction between environmental protection and economic growth. In fact, they are and should be indissolubly connected.

Like many who ran under the Liberal banner in in 2012, I got my posterior handed to me in the most public of ways. Losing is never fun; but losing so publicly and ferociously is devastating. I was the first Liberal in memory to come in third in a riding where that spot was owned by the NDP. I was humbled like I never had been before. Despite the constant reminders from friends and loved ones that there were other factors beyond my control involved, losing is losing. Rationalizations notwithstanding, it was my name on the ballot, no one else's.

I first met the new leader of the Liberal Party of Canada, Michael Ignatieff, in February 2009. I found myself as impressed with him in conversation as I was reading his substantial body of work. He was head and shoulders more qualified, was more broad-gauged, had more real-world experience, and had more insight into the issues in the world and in the country than any of the other party leaders. He's also a lovely human being.

I was relieved when Ignatieff announced the convening of a "Thinkers Conference" in Montreal, modelled after previous conferences in Kingston and Alymer. I was invited to attend, and on the first morning, I took the microphone to make a brief observation and ask a question.

Vancouver Island MP, Keith Martin, did the same. During the coffee break Keith and I were both approached by Pat Sobora, a stranger who I had not previously met. She was Ignatieff's "chief operating officer", and reminded me of that scary nun in the movie Doubt, played by Meryl Streep. She told us in no uncertain terms that MPs and candidates were not welcomed to ask any questions or make comments during the conference. I was taken aback, and Keith was livid beyond words. Why, I asked him, was I so dumb as to spend $5,000 of my own money to be there? The answer soon became clear; this was a public relations exercise, not a genuine effort to flesh-out anything.

At the conclusion of the conference, Ignatieff announced that a Liberal government would rescind the corporate tax cut, which was part of the budget that Liberals had voted for. Corporate taxes did not come up at all during two days of meetings. It was the one and only policy announcement he made coming out of the Montreal meeting.

A week into the election campaign, a large box came to the house. It was the "Family Pack", the campaign platform that only staffers and a few MPs had seen. I certainly hadn't, and like others, had to scramble to get up to speed while convincing myself that this was the best thing since sliced bread.

It wasn't. Just like the "Green Shift" before it, the party and its leaders were tone deaf to what really mattered to Canadians. Justin Trudeau will never make that mistake. He possesses a precious attribute that you can't learn and is indispensible to successful leadership: political judgment. In fact, not since Jean Chretien has a Liberal Party leader had it in such abundance.

In Justin Trudeau's Liberal Party there will be no tablets delivered to doorsteps a week into an election campaign. What the party stands for will certainly have Trudeau's imprinteur on it -- as it should. A strong sense of shared values will be woven into the fabric of this new enterprise.

Owing in no small measure to the resolve and courage of Bob Rae and the dynamism of Trudeau, today this is a different party. It is far more grounded, optimistic, forward-looking, and hopeful since anytime I can remember. It is also pragmatically focused on the economic and social policy bread-and-butter issues that move the dial on our collective well-being and standard of living.

The genius of Trudeau's approach is his direct appeal to Canadians, over the heads of the shrinking Liberal Grand Poobah class. A vast majority of Trudeau's audience are not and will not be actively engaged as partisans in any political formation. No, these are Canadians of all ages that want and need a breath of fresh air on our political culture and institutions.

Trudeau's remarkable reach and celebrity ensures that power returns to the people. Vested interests will take a back seat to Canada, for a change.

Cynicism, treating voters for fools, and ultra-partisanship and all that goes with it has become passé. We see this shift in the upcoming shellacking the government of British Columbia's Christy Clark is about to take at the hands of a positive and smart NDP leader, Adrian Dix.

A new culture and mindset is emerging where entitlement is being exorcised from the Liberal Party of Canada's DNA. Trudeau personifies a new attitude: Canada and the national interest are coming first. The country seems to believe -- with good reason -- that Justin Trudeau and this renewed party, free of its black eyes and self-doubt, is in this for the right reasons and for a noble purpose.

I believe that Canadians will unify around Trudeau, a remarkable individual that has connected on a visceral level with the country. I also have no doubt that his unifying force will rally our best and brightest again to the service of Canada.

As I was on a stage in the middle of the election "debates" in my riding, I vividly recall thinking of the Groucho Marx line: "I would not join any club that would have someone like me as a member." I need not have worried. The voters had no intention of issuing an invitation to me. Yet deep down, even today, I would love nothing more than to serve, especially at this moment in our history.

That's the compelling power of renewal and hope.

Justin Trudeau Through The Years
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Prime Minister Trudeau and his then-wife Margaret leave the city's Notre Dame Basilica Sunday afternoon after the christening of their 22-day old infant Justin Pierre James, Jan. 16, 1972. Tasseled shawls kept the baby hidden from photographers and the 10-degree-below-zero weather. (credit:CP/RCM)
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Eleven-month-old Justin Trudeau, urged on by his mother Margaret Trudeau, crawls up the steps of an aircraft in Ottawa Dec. 5, 1972 to meet his father, then-prime minister, Pierre Trudeau on his return from Britain. (credit:Russell Mant/CP)
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Pierre Trudeau is saluted by RCMP Officer as he carries son Justin to Rideau Hall in 1973. Justin Trudeau teared up when he was presented with a framed copy while visiting Loyalist College in 2013. (credit:Peter Bregg/CP)
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Alexandre (Sacha) Trudeau delivers a right hook to his older brother Justin during a play fight in 1980 at Ottawa airport as the boys await a flight with the return of their father, then-prime minister, Pierre Trudeau. Nobody was injured. Justin was born in 1971 and Sacha in 1973 - both on Christmas day. (credit:Peter Bregg/CP)
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March 1979 photo of the Trudeau children: Michel (front), Alexandre (Sacha) and Justin (rear). (credit:CP)
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It was a big day for Dad, but a long day for the three Trudeau children. Left to right, Justin, Michel and Alexandre (Sacha) Trudeau attended the swearing in ceremonies of their father Pierre Elliott Trudeau as Prime Minister March 3, 1980 at Government House. (credit:Ron Poling/CP)
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Then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau and 10 year-old son Justin walk toward a plane at CFB Ottawa on Nov. 7, 1982. (credit:Chris Schwarz/CP)
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Then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau, left, watches as his 11-year-old son Justin swings on a chain during a tour of an old fort in the Omani town of Nizwa Dec. 2, 1983. Trudeau and Justin spent the day visiting the towns of Jebel and Nizwa 165 kilometres south of Muscat. (credit:Andy Clark/CP Photo)
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Then-prime minister Pierre Trudeau's 11-year-old son Justin jumps off an old cannon while visiting a fort along with his father in the Omani town of Nizwa and Jebel. (credit:Andy Clark/CP)
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Justin Trudeau and friend Mathieu Walker in the Sahara desert in October, 1994. (credit:Mathieu Walker)
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Justin Trudeau and friend Mathieu Walker in the Sahara desert in October, 1994. (credit:Mathieu Walker)
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Justin Trudeau with friends Mathieu Walker and Allen Steverman in Shanghai in 1994. (credit:Mathieu Walker)
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Justin Trudeau with friends Mathieu Walker (left) and Allen Steverman (centre) at the Great Wall of China in 1994. (credit:Mathieu Walker)
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Former prime minister Pierre Trudeau (L), his son, Alexandre (Sacha), ex-wife Margaret Kemper and son Justin weep as they leave a memorial service for their son Michel in Montreal in 1998. Michel Trudeau drowned after being swept into a lake during an avalanche in British Columbia. (credit:CP)
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Justin (left) and Alexandre (Sacha) Trudeau lean out of the funeral train to show appreciation to mourners who turned out to pay their respects to former prime minister Pierre Trudeau in Dorval, Que., Monday Oct. 2, 2000. Trudeau's casket was moved from Ottawa to Montreal for a state funeral. () (credit:Adrian Wyld/CP)
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Justin Trudeau is consoled by his mother Margaret after reading the eulogy for his father, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau during his state funeral in Montreal, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2000. (credit:Paul Chiasson/CP)
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Justin Trudeau delivers a eulogy for his late father Pierre Trudeau during the state funeral for the former prime minister at the Notre-Dame Basilica in Montreal, Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2000. Trudeau first caught the public heartstrings in October 2000, when he delivered a moving, deeply felt eulogy for his legendary father, weaving an emotional spell from inside the cavernous Notre-Dame Basilica in Montreal. (credit:Paul Chiasson/CP)
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Justin Trudeau breaks down on his father's casket after reading the eulogy during the state funeral for former prime minister Pierre Trudeau Tuesday, Oct. 3, 2000 in Montreal. (credit:Paul Chiasson/CP)
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Justin Trudeau gives a rose to a young girl, one of thousands of mourners who stood outside Notre-Dame Basillica in Montreal Tuesday, October 3, 2000 during a state funeral for his father, former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. (credit:Andre Forget/CP)
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An enthusiastic Justin Trudeau talks to reporters during a news conference to promote avalanche awareness in West Vancouver Thursday Jan. 25, 2001. (credit:Chuck Stoody/CP)
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Justin Trudeau stands at the base of a mountain near the evidence of a controlled avalanche at Lake Louise, Alberta, Friday January 12, 2002. (credit:Adrian Wyld/CP)
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Trudeau with adviser and friend Gerald Butts in July 2003 at Virginia Falls, Nahanni National Park Reserve in the Northwest Territories. (credit:Gerald Butts)
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Justin Trudeau carves through a gate during a celebrity slalom race in Mont Tremblant, Que. Friday, Dec. 12, 2003. Trudeau was taking part in a 24-hour ski-a-thon for charity organized by Jacques Villeneuve and Villeneuve's manager Craig Pollock. (credit:Ryan Remiorz/CP)
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Justin Trudeau spoke to students as Sisler High School about the benefits of joining the Katimavik Project on March 9, 2004 (credit:Wayne Glowaki/Winnipeg Free Press/CP)
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Justin Trudeau, son of the late prime minister Pierre Trudeau, leaves with his new bride Sophie Gregoire in his father's 1959 Mercedes 300 SEL after their marriage ceremony in Montreal Saturday, May 28, 2005. (credit:Ryan Remiorz/CP)
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Sophie Gregoire waves to the crowd as she arrives for her wedding to Justin Trudeau, son of the late prime minister Pierre Trudeau, in Montreal Saturday, May 28, 2005. (credit:Ryan Remiorz/CP)
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Then-leadership candidate Stéphane Dion crosses paths with Justin Trudeau, a supporter of Gerard Kennedy, at the Liberal Leadership Convention on Nov. 30, 2006 in Montreal. The day after he won the leadership, Dion told Trudeau he needed his help and urged him to run. (credit:CP PHOTO/Ryan Remiorz)
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Former prime minister Jean Chretien meets Justin Trudeau at the Liberal leadership convention, Friday, Dec. 1, 2006, in Montreal. (credit:Tom Hanson/CP)
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Justin Trudeau poses in London, Ont., on Tuesday, June 5, 2007 with a group of youth who participated in the Katimavik national youth service program that he has been actively involved in. The funny faces came from a request by a parent taking a photograph. (credit:Dave Chidley/CP)
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Justin Trudeau raises his arms in victory after being voted in as the Liberal representative in Montreal's Papineau riding, on April 29, 2007. (credit:Robert J. Galbraith/CP)
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Justin Trudeau, then Liberal candidate for the riding of Papineau, on the campaign trail with his mother, Margaret, in Montreal on Sept. 23, 2008. Trudeau snatched the riding from the Bloc Québécois by 1,189 votes. (credit:CP/ Graham Hughes)
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Liberal Justin Trudeau, then a candidate in the riding of Papineau, on the campaign trail in Montreal, Tuesday Sept. 23, 2008 with his mother, Margaret. (credit:Graham Hughe/CP)
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Then-Liberal Leader Stephane Dion chats with Justin Trudeau in Vancouver before boarding the campaign plane to fly to Ontario, Oct. 7, 2008. (credit:CP/Adrian Wyld)
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Justin Trudeau apologizes for swearing at Environment Minister Peter Kent in the House of Commons Dec. 14, 2011. (credit:CP/Sean Kilpatrick)
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Justin Trudeau poses in this official photo for his boxing match with Senator Patrick Brazeau. (credit:Media Ball)
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Senator Patrick Brazeau, right, and Liberal MP Justin Trudeau take part in a weigh-in for a upcoming boxing match Wednesday March 28, 2012. (credit:Fred Chartrand/CP)
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Senator Patrick Brazeau, right, and Liberal MP Justin Trudeau take part in a weigh-in for a upcoming boxing match Wednesday March 28, 2012, in Ottawa. (credit:Fred Chartrand/CP)
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Liberal MP Justin Trudeau, left, fights Senator Patrick Brazeau during charity boxing match for cancer research Saturday, March 31, 2012 in Ottawa. (credit:Fred Chartrand/CP)
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Senator Patrick Brazeau, right, and Liberal MP Justin Trudeau take part in a charity boxing match for cancer research Saturday, March 31, 2012 in Ottawa . (credit:Fred Chartrand/CP)
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Liberal MP Justin Trudeau celebrates after he defeated Senator Patrick Brazeau during charity boxing match for cancer research Saturday, March 31, 2012 in Ottawa . (credit:Fred Chartrand/CP )
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Liberal MP Justin Trudeau kisses his wife Sophie Grégoire after winning a boxing match against Senator Patrick Brazeau on Saturday, March 31, 2012 in Ottawa. (credit:Fred Chartrand/CP)
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Liberal MPs, including Justin Trudeau, look on as Senator Patrick Brazeau holds a Liberal hockey sweater on Parliament Hill Ottawa, Monday April 2, 2012. (credit:Adrian Wyld/CP)
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Liberal MP Justin Trudeau trims the end of Senator Patrick Brazeau's pony tail out of respect in the Foyer of the House of Commons on Parliament Hill Ottawa, Monday April 2, 2012. (credit:Adrian Wyld/CP)
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Liberal MP Justin Trudeau announces he will seek the leadership of the party at a news conference, Tuesday, October 2, 2012 in Montreal. (credit:Paul Chiasson/CP)
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Liberal MP Justin Trudeau waves to the crowd of supporters as he holds his son Xavier and his wife Sophie Gregoire holds their daughter Ella-Grace after announcing he will seek the leadership of the party Tuesday, October 2, 2012 in Montreal. (credit:Paul Chiasson/CP)
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Justin Trudeau, right, chats to his chief advisor Gerald Butts after taking part in the the Liberal leadership debate in Mississauga, Ont., on Saturday, February 16, 2013. (credit:CP/Chris Young)
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Marc Garneau, left, and Justin Trudeau take part in the Liberal leadership debate in Mississauga, Ont., on Feb. 16, 2013. (credit:CP/Chris Young)
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