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40 years later, there will be no landmark walk in the snow for this Trudeau

No snow in Ottawa and little chance Justin follows dad鈥檚 footsteps, despite the parallels
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Prime Minister Justin Trudeau makes an announcement in Membertou First Nation on Cape Breton Island, N.S., Thursday, Feb. 22, 2024. Forty years ago, his father Pierre Trudeau announced he would step down as prime minister. Liberals say there鈥檚 no way the younger Trudeau has plans to follow suit. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

The famous 鈥渨alk in the snow鈥 that purportedly spurred Pierre Trudeau鈥檚 departure as prime minister 40 years ago has taken on such mythical proportions in Canadian politics that it even has its own Wikipedia entry.

鈥淣oun. (Canada, chiefly politics, idiomatic). An occasion when a momentous career decision is made, especially a decision to resign or retire.鈥

Some consider it an apocryphal story: Trudeau, confronted with the reality of a resurgent Conservative party, made up his mind to step down while strolling through a blizzard on Feb. 28, 1984.

Might not his footsteps-following son 鈥 facing strikingly similar electoral math 鈥 opt to follow suit?

Those closest to him are clear: not a chance.

If the prime minister was resigning, one Liberal insider said, using decidedly unparliamentary language to emphasize the point, there鈥檚 no way he would do it on the same day as his father.

There鈥檚 no snow in the Ottawa forecast, noted another. In fact, on the very anniversary itself Wednesday, it poured rain.

No one in Trudeau鈥檚 inner circle was willing to speak publicly about the subject, lest it be taken as a message to the man himself. But veterans of political life, those who have seen up close how leaders wrestle with such dilemmas, say it often comes down to two things: how likely they are to win again, and whether they accomplished their goals.

Sometimes, it can be both.

There鈥檚 no denying the parallels: A Liberal establishment, long in the tooth and down in the polls, faced with a difficult economic climate, inflation woes and a fresh-faced opponent with all the momentum.

It鈥檚 even a leap year, just like in 1984.

But Trudeau has long dismissed, even mocked, the suggestion that he鈥檚 done.

He鈥檚 been stalking the starting line for months, anxious to defend his track record against Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre 鈥 his political and ideological antithesis, who sits atop a groundswell of popular momentum.

He would 鈥渂ring us back to, 鈥楧rill, baby, drill,鈥 ignore climate change, bring us back to 鈥楩ather is the head of the household,鈥欌 Trudeau said of Poilievre last year in an interview with friend and former radio host Terry DiMonte.

鈥淚t鈥檚 that kind of thinking that is really putting at threat everything we鈥檝e been able as a country to build over the past years.鈥

If an election were held today, polls suggest Trudeau鈥檚 time in power would end. But with his party鈥檚 agreement with the New Democrats, he could govern for another year and a half.

Few leaders decide on a whim that it鈥檚 time to go, said former Manitoba Premier Gary Doer, who stepped down from his job in 2009 two years into his third majority government.

From the moment he first sat in the premier鈥檚 chair, the plan was always to leave before being pushed, Doer said.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e always thinking of your legacy,鈥 he said.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e trying to define as much as possible your own legacy, because God knows there鈥檚 lots of pundits who will try and define it for you the minute you step down.鈥

Doer鈥檚 final decision came when then-prime minister Stephen Harper approached him about becoming Canada鈥檚 ambassador in Washington. Timing is always key but not always in your control, he said.

On the other hand, if the time has indeed arrived, the world can鈥檛 know it, Doer added.

鈥淭he minute you announce that you鈥檙e not running, you become weak and the media and public鈥檚 focus just shifts right away to who鈥檚 going to replace you,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 almost instantaneous.鈥

That means Trudeau is running again until he decides he鈥檚 not. Even speculation with close cabinet colleagues about the possibility of a future resignation could easily leak and create havoc, the insiders said.

There is, of course, lots of chatter about his would-be successor. But within the party itself, there are no hands on his back. Cabinet ministers weary of deflecting the question have settled on their message.

鈥淲e (already) have a leader,鈥 Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland told a recent news conference in Ottawa as her fellow ministers all nodded enthusiastically in agreement.

Stepping down in defeat is more common than leaving while in office. Of the 22 prime ministers who held the office before Justin Trudeau, 12 resigned their post after losing an election.

Two died in office, including Canada鈥檚 first prime minister John A. Macdonald. Macdonald resigned as prime minister once, but stayed on as the leader of his party, and was re-elected as prime minister four years later.

Of the eight that stepped away of their own accord from both their party鈥檚 leadership and the prime minister鈥檚 post, three cited declining health, not a political motive.

For the other five, they left when they were ready to go.

Pierre Trudeau had been prime minister for more than 15 years total when he took his walk in the snow. If his flair for the dramatic made the decision seem like a spur-of-the-moment one, it was decidedly not.

In fact, it was carefully calculated, said Raymond Blake, a history professor at the University of Regina who is about to publish a new book on the speeches of Canada鈥檚 prime ministers.

鈥淓veryone knew he was going to resign but of course he had to do it on the 29th, in a leap year,鈥 Blake said.

鈥淚t was very much planned. He could have resigned on the 28th or the first of March. But that mystique, that celebrity, means you can鈥檛 do it on a day any mere mortal would.鈥

More typically, there鈥檚 not much suspense before it happens.

When Brian Mulroney announced his exit in February 1993 after nearly nine years in office, he looked like a man who鈥檇 lost the vigour for the job.

In a journal entry published in Mulroney鈥檚 book, 鈥淢emoirs,鈥 he said it was long before he lost the constitutional referendum in 1992 that he had decided against leading the Tories in the next campaign.

The reason, he wrote in January 1993, about two months before the announcement, was simple.

鈥淚f you run again and win, either a majority or a minority government, what do you want to achieve? And my answer simply is, 鈥榤ore of the same,鈥欌 he wrote.

鈥淚 do not believe that honest answer to be adequate, so I will step aside.鈥

When it happened, polls showed the Conservatives with just 21 per cent public support, compared with 49 per cent for the Liberals under Jean Chr茅tien.

Chr茅tien also left before losing an election, midway through his third majority government. He was facing a revolt from Paul Martin and Martin鈥檚 supporters. But he had decided by the time of the 2000 election not to seek a fourth term.

It wouldn鈥檛 be made public for another two years, and he would stay in the office for another 15 months before Martin was ultimately elected as the leader to replace him.

In January, in an interview with CTV, Chr茅tien said the decision to leave is a very 鈥減ersonal鈥 one.

If there are any commonalities among leaders who choose to leave, Doer said, it鈥檚 that they need to do it on their own terms, when they feel the time is right.

鈥淭here鈥檚 not a politician that doesn鈥檛 watch what happens to other politicians and how they make the transition,鈥 he said.

鈥淎nd not just how, but when.鈥

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