Scheer seeks common ground, Moe leaves disappointed after meetings with Trudeau
OTTAWA — Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer and Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe’s back-to-back meetings with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Tuesday yielded few results in the search for national unity after a divisive federal election.
With the House of Commons to return on Dec. 5, Scheer said it’s up to Trudeau to ensure the throne speech attracts enough support to keep the government standing, while Moe suggested it’s time for his province to find a way to act more on its own.
Moe said he arrived in Ottawa in good faith to hear how Trudeau plans to make good on a promise he made on election night: that he would address the frustrations of voters in Alberta and Saskatchewan who didn’t elected a single Liberal MP between them on Oct. 21.
“I came today to hear about what he was going to do differently to support the industries and the people in our province and I can tell you this — I did not hear that there is going to be anything different, there is going to be more of the same,” a visibly upset Moe said after the meeting.