Trudeau sidesteps talk of imminent NAFTA deal, prepares to tackle pipeline crisis
LIMA, Peru — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau will return to Ottawa on Sunday following a three-day trip to Peru hoping to calm tempers and find a peaceful resolution to the Trans Mountain pipeline crisis that has pitted Alberta and B.C. against each other.
The prime minister is scheduled to sit down with Alberta Premier Rachel Notley and B.C. Premier John Horgan on Parliament Hill, marking the first time the three will be in the same room together to discuss the pipeline since Horgan threatened to block it.
The last-minute meeting was called as Trudeau left for Peru on Thursday to attend the Summit of the Americas, which was overshadowed by Syria and where U.S. officials suggested a new North American free trade deal could be only weeks away.
“It became very clear that the level of polarization around this debate required significant measures,” Trudeau told reporters in Lima when asked why he decided to call the meeting between Notley and Horgan after the government initially resisted the idea.


