Trade, Tories and Trump: three ways politics touched Canadians this week
Ottawa was sleepy and mostly congenial all week long — at least until Friday — with most MPs back in their ridings after Thanksgiving and cabinet ministers off cutting ribbons in far-flung places.
Politicos who stayed behind consorted amiably with the like-minded. The French prime minister waxed eloquent about Justin Trudeau’s foreign policy; Ontario Conservative Leader Patrick Brown spoke to — and passed the hat among — his Ottawa supporters over dinner; and a 14-hour brainstorming session among growth-hungry economy types attempted to solve the country’s prosperity problems.
But the Hill bolted upright on Friday morning after a regional government in Belgium voted to reject the free-trade agreement between Canada and the European Union, putting the entire pact — and seven years of work — in jeopardy. The vote was quickly followed by news of the plane-crash death of former Alberta premier and former federal Conservative cabinet minister Jim Prentice, who was a fixture for so long in Ottawa that the loss was felt immediately and deeply by a huge range of politicians, staffers, lobbyists and reporters.
Here are three ways politics affected regular people this week:


