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Stephen Harper says Donald Trump shouldn’t be the excuse for ‘Liberal failure’

It’s the first time Harper has hit the campaign trail since the 2015 election, when he was prime minister 

It’s the first time Harper has hit the campaign trail since the 2015 election, when he was prime minister

OTTAWA — Former prime minister Stephen Harper formally endorsed Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre at a rally in Edmonton on Monday evening and argued that the Liberal government is using threats from U.S. President Donald Trump to paper over its own failings.

Harper argued that most of the country’s current problems “were created by the policies of three Liberal terms” that leader Mark Carney supported and that Poilievre would reverse if elected.

“Pierre has, just as importantly, long advocated the positive alternatives for change. To axe those taxes, build homes, bring back jobs, get our resources to the whole world and stand up to Washington from a position of strength,” said Harper, to cheers from an enthusiastic crowd.

“I believe that the challenge this country faces today from the United States, as real and serious as it is, should not be another excuse for Liberal failure,” he said.

It’s the first time Harper has hit the campaign trail since the 2015 election, when he was prime minister, and comes at time when the Conservatives are in a close race with the Liberals with the April 28 election only weeks away.

Harper said he disagreed with the notion that Carney can slide into the role of prime minister without any experience on Parliament Hill.

“Don’t let anyone tell you that he was born to be prime minister or that he can just somehow parachute into the job fully prepared,” said Harper. “Political experience — elected accountable political experience and the capacity for growth with that political experience — that is what Pierre has demonstrated for two decades, and that is the single most important characteristic a prime minister needs.”

Harper also ripped Carney for his comments about guiding Canada through the global financial crisis in 2008, which Conservatives have widely criticized as stealing credit from Harper and then financial minister Jim Flaherty.

“By the way, I say that as the guy who actually did lead Canada through the global financial crisis, I hear there’s someone else claiming it was him,” said Harper. “It was, of course, our government, the late great Jim Flaherty, and our Conservative team who were responsible for the day to day macroeconomic management during that challenging time.”

Poilievre was in British Columbia on Monday morning to announce that a Conservative government would complete environmental assessments of major infrastructure projects within one year and push through approval of 10 pending major resource projects, followed by the rally in Edmonton. He will travel to Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. on Tuesday, following by a swing through the Greater Toronto Area later in the week.

Liberal Leader Mark Carney was also in B.C. on Monday, with a rally scheduled in Calgary on Tuesday evening.

More to come…

National Post

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