The Bridge with Peter Mansbridge - Encore Presentation - The Prince - The Book.
Episode Date: June 12, 2024Today an encore presentation of an episode that originally aired on June 11th. Author and Journalist Stephen Maher joins The Bridge to talk about his new book, The Prince, which is all about Justin ...Trudeau. He's been covering Trudeau since he stepped onto the public stage so what has Maher learned that he didn't already know about the man who leads the country and says he's about to enter his fourth election campaign as Liberal leader?
Transcript
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And hello there, Peter Mansbridge here. You are just moments away from the latest episode of The Bridge,
and the latest episode is our Wednesday Encore Edition. And it's an encore from just yesterday.
Stephen Mayer, the author of the new book on Justin Trude to Tuesday right here on The Bridge.
As we've done a couple of times in the last few weeks, we've got a new book on the market.
A new one that fits right into The Bridges kind of area of discussion.
That's Canadian politics. This is the second book, although it's really the first book.
The first one was kind of an essay by Paul Wells on Justin Trudeau. And that, of course,
was Justin Trudeau on the ropes. This one is called The Prince, and it's about Justin Trudeau.
Both these books, very timely, given the events of the day
and kind of where we are in terms of the length of time in office for Justin Trudeau
and the likelihood of an election.
Well, it's more than the likelihood.
The fact there will be an election at some point in the next year and a half.
Will Justin Trudeau be in it?
Well, he says he will.
And, well, we'll take his word for that at the moment.
So, Stephen Mayer will be along with us.
Stephen's a well-known reporter on Parliament Hill, works out of Halifax.
Well, he's from Halifax.
He works out of Ottawa, but he's back and forth in Halifax.
A career that has broken a lot of stories over time.
And he's well-respected, well-regarded by his colleagues in the parliamentary press gallery.
So we'll look forward to talking with Stephen here in a few moments' time.
But first, as often happens, a little housekeeping to do.
Question of the week.
Announced it yesterday, and I've got to tell you,
there have never been so many entries.
It's an easy one
but it's also kind of a summer one you know if you're traveling this summer if you're driving
you're hiking you're walking you're bicycling whatever you may be doing um the odds are you're
at times listening to music and we all have our favorites. And the question was centered around your favorite Canadian song.
And basically, we define Canadian as it's either performed or written by a Canadian.
Well, within minutes of announcing that, the entry started coming in.
And as usual, I say, you know, send it to the Mansbridge Podcast at gmail.com.
Include your name, your location, and keep it short, keep it tight.
Well, for the first time, you really did keep it tight.
Most of these entries just say the name of the song.
That's it.
No kind of explanation as to why they picked this one.
You can add a second line, you know.
It's when you get to the third, fourth, fifth, 18th, 21st lines.
That's when it's a problem.
So I know there will still be more entries to come.
If you want to include a little reasoning
Behind why you picked a certain song
Don't be shy about doing that
If you've already entered, just leave it the way it is
It's tricky enough
Keeping all these in some semblance of order
But if you haven't entered yet and you want to,
name a song and a reason why you like that song.
Okay?
That's important.
Thursday will be your turn.
Both your entries onto this question of the week
plus the random ranter will return this week.
Friday, it is a good talk, of course, with Chantel and Bruce.
And, you know, we've only got two good talks left before the summer.
A rough idea about the summer, because I know this disturbs some of you
that we take a hiatus in the summer, because I know this disturbs some of you that we take a hiatus in the summer.
But there will be a number of special shows during the summer, new shows.
There will be two good talks, one in July and one in August.
There will be two U.S. election shows, one in July at the time
of the Republican convention, and one in August at the time of the Republican convention,
and one in August at the time of the Democratic convention.
So there will be four, count them four, new shows during the summer.
If something huge happens, we may try and do a special show around that.
Okay, so that's always an option.
It's tricky technically, depending on where I am, you know,
where the equipment is and whether there's an internet connection
and all of those little things.
But the plan is for a nice hiatus.
Some of us, you know, at our advanced age, in the golden years,
are looking forward to a summer break, as I'm sure many of you are.
So there we go. That's some sense of housekeeping for this day.
So let's get to the meat of the issue here,
which is Stephen Mayer, author of The Prince.
Are we going to take a break now?
I'm not going to take it during the interview.
We want to keep that interview intact.
So we'll take it right after the interview.
Here we go.
My conversation with Stephen Mayer.
So, Stephen, a couple of why questions, first of all.
Why The Prince?
The title, Why The Prince? um why questions first of all uh why the prince the the title why the prince uh it i first started thinking of him as a prince when i met him before he went into politics at
darcy mcgee's i don't know if you ever found yourself there or a pub in ottawa oh yeah i
remember uh and uh i started talking to him let talking about conversation, and mentioned his father in passing at some point,
and I stopped myself and said,
oh, that's weird.
I realize I'm talking about your dad,
and he got a kind of regal look and said,
I never forget I'm a Trudeau,
and as I started researching the book,
so I always thought,
this guy is not like most of the people I've met. He
has a different sense of himself and a different background. And as I started working on the book,
I came across quotes from his wife, his mother, and his brother calling him a prince. And I think
it fits as a sort of way of thinking about him, a sort of frame, neither positive nor negative,
but he's a sort of princely character with him, a sort of frame, neither positive nor negative,
but he's a sort of princely character with princely courage, princely charisma,
princely capriciousness, princely vanity, that it sort of suits him, I think.
Do you think most people think of him that way?
It's interesting that clearly his family, as you say, had this name for him,
thought of him that way.
Do you think the average Canadian thinks of him that way?
Well, I think there's something about that early career in politics where there was this kind of yearning to him, yearning for him among the public
from the time of the eulogy on, his eulogy for his father,
where there's a feeling that the the canadians wanted pierre trudeau's
son to come and lead the country again you know it was it was in the air uh which i think is a
sort of princely feeling it's almost a sort of restoration story right or like aragon in the story, right? Or like Aragorn in Lord of the Rings, the once and future king, right? I really
do believe that in the public mind, not now, but at that time, there was a sense of him as the
rightful heir being returned to the throne. It's ironic, really, because, you know, as someone who covered both of them as they were prime minister, and obviously Justin Trudeau still is, but there was this yearning for them at the beginning, right?
68 was all about Trudeau mania, and the country was kind of crazy for him.
2015, I'm not sure they were crazy for him, but they were yearning for him, as you said.
They were like, we're ready for a Trudeau again, Trudeau 2.
But by the time Pierre Trudeau left office, they wanted him out.
You know, they got mad at him a couple times.
They got mad at him in 79, mainly because of wage and price controls,
and they felt they'd been lied to.
But by the time 84 rolled around, move out.
Like, we want you gone.
And now we're seeing the same kind of thing with Justin Trudeau,
where it was like that at the beginning, and here nine years later,
almost ten years later, there's a sense anyway, if you believe in polls,
that they want him gone so
there's a there's kind of a parallel track when the two of them really are very different we're
very different kinds of people i uh when people talk to me about the the feeling of divisiveness
in the country now you know which is part of the legacy, or the current situation of Justin Trudeau that that society is
intensely, I would think, unhealthily galvanized around
feelings about this person. Such that he's kind of a barrier to
achieving things politically.
And people say that it's unprecedented.
And I didn't really cover Pierre, but I remember the feeling of, I would say,
exasperation at the end of the Mulroney era, right?
There is a thing at the end of long-running governments.
I don't think we saw it with Kretchen as much.
His persona was such that people never really seemed to get to know him.
But now with Justin, I think it likely is worse,
likely because the media environment is different.
The social media, the algorithmic anger machines are such that,
you know, a lot of people really can't believe that this man is still running the country, this man who they despise.
And I don't know, can you remember, was it like that with his dad?
Was it quite as bad?
There were times when he was despised, especially in certain parts of the country,
namely the West, right?
So, but there was,
you know,
and you still feel it,
you still see it every once in a while,
uh,
when there's talk of Pierre Trudeau.
Um,
but nevertheless,
you know,
we're talking Justin Trudeau.
So let's,
let's deal some more with that.
I mean,
you've covered him,
as you say,
since before he'd be,
uh,
certainly before he became leader and prime minister.
So there, in a sense, you would assume there are no surprises
when you start to dig into a book like this, but there always are.
So tell me something that surprised you,
that you learned about Justin Trudeau researching this book.
There's a lot of little things.
I had the sense, for for instance that the aga
khan uh business that his people had advised against him taking that trip uh and i learned
through the research that they had done so with some enthusiasm and he was not interested in
hearing them and that that's also true of later trips he takes these vacations that are
uh impolitic um you know hard to justify out of tune with the canadian political culture and it's pretty clear that all along everyone who works with him is saying well it'd be better if
you didn't do that you know uh so that's kind of interesting when you start to think about it, that he insists on all that.
One little tidbit that I learned is that early on, when Sasha was still part of the leadership team, that there was some kind of a dinner at Mama Teresa's in Ottawa, where Dominic LeBlanc was trying to convince people that they were picking
the wrong Trudeau
which
was interesting that at that late stage
when he was getting ready to
take over
the party that there were still people who thought
that he was a lightweight
or not as strong as his brother
so lots of little things like that.
I was struck, I managed to interview him,
and I asked him about the moment during the leadership campaign
when La Presse endorsed him.
And I had heard that he started to weep.
He was on the bus in southwestern Ontario.
It was such an emotionally intense moment
to have
the emprunteur of andre pratt and the editorial board of the press give him this warm blessing
compared him to laurier and said you know which kind of gave permission to a certain
uh part of the quebec electorate to vote for him him. And he was so overwhelmed that he cried.
And then when I asked him about it in February,
his eyes welled up again.
So I thought that was interesting that it showed a sense of how much the
approval of Quebecers meant to him and that he would be so emotionally
attached to that.
Did you ever think he was a
lightweight i did yeah i did uh i thought he was likable um but i write in the book about how
when i went to papineau uh for post media when he declared i didn't get it i didn't get justin trudeau i was impressed by thomas mulcair and by
bob ray at that time right both i mean you you cover them both you could um they could out debate
you about anything you know what i mean they're they're deep grounding in the way the country
is governed and uh uh careers where they had faced obstacles and overcome them and,
you know, a sophisticated understanding of Canadian political system.
And Justin Trudeau was a former high school teacher.
Right.
When you look at it, his resume, I think he had the thinnest resume of any prime minister
to that point.
And at that time, probably Stephen Harper was second thinnest resume of any prime minister to that point uh and at that time probably stephen harper
was second thinnest resume and um you know so but what i didn't get and gerald butts tried to
clue me in that day i had a chat with him uh his advisor and he kind of laughed at me and said, you don't, you don't understand Canadians want this guy. Right.
And why, why did they want it?
I mean, it had to be more than is the son of another one.
Oh, it certainly is because otherwise Catherine Clark would be on her way to
24 Sussex, right?
Like, you know, she might do a splendid job, actually.
The little that I know of her, I think she's an impressive person.
But Justin had a tremendous drive, tremendous commitment.
Once he decided that he was going to do it, first run in Papineau, he did not
shrink from those things that a lot of politicians try to get
out of, going to the park, cleaning, shaking hands, door knocking
with strangers. I've been covering this business for a while and you hear
stories from strategists about how they'll send a candidate out with a bunch of literature to deliver in a neighborhood and then find out later the guy just
put it in a dumpster and didn't do the door knocking right like you know that stuff is hard
yeah uh and he did it and he's better at it especially hard if you tend to be a bit of an
introvert which it's clear that you think he is.
Yeah, I don't think there's much out of what it is, but he does get energy from interacting with the public on a significant scale.
You know, and the people who traveled with him on those tours said he could do two or three times as many events as a normal politician, right? He'd wake up in the morning, go to the gym, show up at 7 a.m.,
having exercise and fed himself and ready to go and could go hard all day.
So I give him a lot of credit for the commitment that he brought to it,
not just at the street level politicking,
but also the work that he did with Katie Telford and Gerald Butts and Robert
Eisland, you know, the inner circle,
the inner circle in on his Alex Lantier,
I should mention on improving his communication skills on learning
discipline. He was a very undisciplined
politician he would say whatever popped into his head basically he got uh if i'm not mistaken he
got in trouble uh in one interview with you having to do with the boston marathon yeah the day uh
the day after he was elected leader there was the first interview he gave, and it just so happened to be on the day of the Boston Marathon bombing.
And so I said, okay, so you're prime minister.
What would you do in this case?
What would you say?
And he came out with a line about trying to understand the root causes
of why these people, it was unclear at that point who'd done it,
but obviously somebody had, and he wanted to,
he thought what was important at that moment was to try and understand
the root causes of their motivation,
which he just got absolutely clobbered for.
And, you know, he mentioned butts.
I can remember Jerry standing in the corner,
almost put his hand in his head knowing this is not the answer we want,
and he kind of lived with that.
But, I mean, listen, he was definitely politically to a degree naive
about how to handle some of these things when he first got in the job.
So there was a lot of on-the-job training.
And listening to others, which has been an issue that some feel
that he's not good at, and listening to advisors on certain things.
You know, you talked about the various holidays,
whether it was the Aga Khan or whether it was the India trip,
whether it was Tofino.
I mean, we can rattle them off, especially when it kind of becomes clear that he was basically advised,
don't do this.
Like, this is going to backfire on you.
And he goes ahead and does it anyway.
So the question would be, does he take advice?
Does he listen to advice?
Because there's kind of a conflict in what we're saying.
Clearly, he learned how to handle things a little better politically.
But some of these other issues, not so much.
And not only advice, but does he have friends?
Are there people close enough to him that could say to him,
hey, you know, justin this is not working
i think he does and that story where he talked about root causes i'm told that as soon as that
interview was over he said to his people uh i was too hippy dippy with that wasn't i said yeah
you know so that he he was uh he wasn't so egotistical that he would get stick to his positions.
Right. Like he would learn as he went and apologize for dumb things that he said.
And people I mean, we get journalists get kind of we make more of that of those gaffes in a way than the public.
The public will say, oh, OK okay he said something stupid and corrected himself you know uh uh i think um but i think so what made him remarkable and able to
learn and change so quickly was that he could work very very closely in work doing doing that
kind of difficult thing where you're admitting that you
suck at something or said something stupid it's hard on the ego you you would know about the kind
of media training they do uh i've had public speaking training before and people cry right
it's hard you know it's gets at your ego and uh uh so he but he would keep doing it. And he still does. Right.
Like his natural speaking and communications approach is not what we see.
And so he's it's a constant work in progress.
And I give him credit for taking advice and doing all that stuff.
But the vacation things are different in that.
And in the book, the most recent vacation, I did some research and then talked to him about what I'd learned.
He'd been going to this place in Jamaica since he was in diapers with the Green family.
They are very old family friends, and it means a lot to him.
And he wants to his life is difficult.
His family life is difficult. his family life is difficult,
he doesn't get to spend time with his kids,
and he wants to share that special place with his children as his father shared it with him.
And I think what happens is the staff says,
well, we don't think that's a good idea,
and he says, I'm not really asking for your advice.
This is my vacation with my family, and I'm going to do it.
And on one level, I understand it.
On another level, I think, well, why are you making so many headaches for your team, for your brand, right?
Don't do it.
Don't do it.
But that's not how he sees it, I guess. I want to stay on this theme for a little bit because it's interesting, especially in light of
where he is at in his career and where his party is at right now
in terms of who he listens to, who's
in that real inner circle. Clearly it's Katie Telford who's been with him
since the beginning, which is unusual enough
in politics.
People tend to change those kind of senior advisors.
But he hasn't.
He's extremely loyal to her, and obviously she's loyal to him.
But it also becomes at this time, because one assumes she's not telling him, you know,
really maybe it's time to think of moving out.
But he has friends, you know, really, maybe it's time to think of moving out. But he has friends, you know, I assume he has friends in the cabinet, in the caucus, outside of politics.
And what they must be saying.
Is there that small group of people he talks to? Yeah.
So I think that Tom Pitfield, you probably knew his dad.
Sure.
Dominic LeBlanc, Mark Miller.
I think he's friendly with Seamus.
So there are, I think he's still somewhat friendly with the
gerald butts you know right uh but um uh you know and obviously he's close to to katie and
some other people in the pmo but that's you know they work together but i the um
you know uh mark miller and seamusamus and Gerald butts were all in his,
his,
we're all groomsmen for him when he got married.
So he's known these people for a long time.
And,
and,
uh,
the way these things work that I think the friends you make before you become
prime minister are different from the friends you make after you become prime
minister.
Um,
so,
you know,
and those are some pretty savvy people, you know they're they're um they
would not be sycophantic with him i wouldn't think and i think and i've had some indication
just gossip but that you know they're uh some of them may be saying well it's been quite a run
hasn't it justin what's next for you yeah right
you must be so pleased with how everything's gone and you're still a young man all right
what do you think what do you think he's really thinking right now
i mean i i know that's hard to ask you that question but
in this moment from outside the inner circle, you're probably,
because of what you've been doing, researching and preparing
and talking to a lot of people about this book,
you probably know him as well as anybody outside the inner circle.
What do you believe when you hear the things he's saying
about staying right now?
Do you think he really means that?
I don't think – I basically don't listen to that.
When I interviewed him in February and he said, you know, look,
this is why I got into politics.
Polyam and I have completely different views of the country and I'm here for
the big fights and that's why I want to do it. And you know,
you've been around him. He's a persuasive, charismatic sort of figure.
And I left the room thinking, gee, well, I guess I was wrong in thinking he might leave. You know, he kind of does the Star Trek mind meld thing on you worse, right? He brought out a budget. I was waiting for that.
Let's see if he can get a couple points in the polls.
Let's see if he can sell a product again, right?
Maybe he can, but he hasn't been able to.
So he looks like a spent force.
And I know that he's a smart guy.
And I know that the people close to him would be telling him uh it's a difficult position and i know that behind the scenes with his advisors he speaks
frankly about the political difficulties that they're in he's not living in a um a world of make-believe he knows that they're in a uh the soup right uh so you look at all that
and you think likely it would be better for the liberals to get someone else in there and try to
get a bit of a new start before the next election um and likely it's better for justin because
it'd be better for whatever he does next if he hasn't had his nose bloodied by Pierre Polio, right?
However, I don't – one other thing I know about Justin Trudeau is that he is very controlled, undisciplined message communicator now.
And he is able – he is not going to show his true feelings oh not all politicians
are like that but he can put on a mask uh and one example that really made me see that side of him
is it looks as though he knew before the rally in truro in 2019 for Lenore Zan,
that Time Magazine was about to drop the blackface story.
And he gave an exuberant speech and high energy.
When inside, he must have been awaiting what might be like a political death sentence. So he is resilient and has a remarkable ability to project the emotion he wants to project.
That's a long way of saying, I don't know, Peter.
I don't know what he's thinking.
Well, one thing you do know, and I know, and our friend Paul Wells writes about in his essay on Trudeau right now,
is that the fight is always something that inspires him,
whatever that fight may be.
He uses the example, obviously, of the fight with Brazeau,
the actual physical fight, the boxing match.
Do you place as much weight in that as others do?
I do, yeah.
And I see that as an example of his extraordinary confidence uh he told his stepfather uh bet on me i'm gonna beat this guy right he knew he knew he was gonna
win uh everybody else thought brazzo was gonna win just by looking at pictures of the two guys
uh but trudeau knew uh and his stepfather took his advice and won some money.
The other moment like that, I don't know if you'll recall when he rolled out his Democratic reform package at a time when Tom Mulcair was way ahead in the polls. You'll remember that was
when he first promised we'd had our last election with first past the post. he moncler had been ahead in the polls for ages he looked like
he was you know surely the alternative to harper and i was amazed by how buoyant and cheerful and
optimistic trudeau was he has a profound confidence one former cabinet minister said it's like a
superpower if we all had that goodness knows what we could accomplish so he may actually think now that he's going to shock everyone and beat polyabs but i i
you've been watching the game for a long time have you ever seen anyone come back from this
kind of position no no but everything's changed about everything's changed about politics
everything's changed about the media Everything's changed about the media.
I mean, there used to be a saying that if you went into a campaign 10 points down,
you couldn't recover.
You just couldn't recover.
And that's when it was a 60-day campaign.
Going into one, if it remains more or less the same, 15 to 20 points down,
you'd say, man, that's impossible.
But, you know, things can happen.
But it seems very unlikely that anything could happen to change, you know,
those numbers, but we've witnessed it.
We've seen change.
Look what just happened in India.
Modi was supposed to win in a walk, right?
He didn't. He still won, but he ended up in a minority when he was fully expected to get
a majority. Things can happen.
True. I also, though, not just the polls, but talking to people. I was at the Greek
Fest in Halifax last night, you know, a fantastic thing.
And I was talking to, like, second-generation Greek
and Lebanese people who have had it with Trudeau.
If you're losing the Halifax Greeks and Lebanese people,
you know, and they're saying, I don't like Polyeth,
but we've got to get rid of Trudeau.
That's – and that may sound stereotypical,
but there are voting patterns,
and those communities are traditionally
among the strongest liberal supporters in the country.
So that kind of thing, you know,
you hear it all kinds of places,
and he's got an uphill climb to change those minds, I think.
This year, I read something you said to susan
delacorte a week or two ago that your sense of where he was when you began this project
is very different from where you see him today you want to talk about that for a minute
sure so when i started working on the book in October 2022, when I talked to people for my interviews, I'd say, look, I think it's been a very successful government.
I think that they got elected to tackle inequality, reconciliation, climate change. Those were three important files. They did make progress on all of them um uh not without difficulty um they managed covid
very well they managed nafta very well uh trudeau changed the country he legalized marijuana he
you know uh improved or changed or reformed a lot of things.
But since then, you have a housing crisis that is largely linked to federal immigration policies that didn't make sense.
I don't think they knew what they were doing.
And this foreign interference thing that it's hard to have faith in the people running the country. And you end up with this story this past week with the committee of parliamentarians revealing that we've got what sounds like traitors in the House of Commons.
Right. And I have never had a sense throughout any of that,
that there's a clear message and a clear plan.
They're always dragging their feet.
They're not wanting to admit it's a problem.
There's a,
I find it somewhat mysterious why,
you know,
it's as though sticking up for Canada is somehow gauche.
It's almost like that,
right?
Like,
well,
we,
we don't want to make a fuss about this kind of thing.
So it's hard like that, right? Like, well, we don't want to make a fuss about this kind of thing. So it's hard to end up – it's shaken my confidence in him during that period
when I had a generally sort of nuanced but positive view of him,
and I'm finding it harder to maintain that.
It is – the foreign interference thing is – It's interesting because when it started,
I'm not sure it really galvanized the Canadian people.
They were like there was other things on their mind,
whether it was COVID or inflation or food prices or whatever it was,
housing prices.
But of late, as soon as you start throwing the T word around,
whether it's traitors or treason or what have you,
even when you try to balance it off with the potential of McCarthyism at the same time
and some prejudging some of this stuff, it's still ugly. And you wonder why it has hung around so
long and that they haven't been able to deal with it. Look, we're almost out of time, Stephen. Let me ask you just a couple more questions about the sourcing for this,
because you seem to have done a tremendous number of interviews
in the last couple of years.
I think I read somewhere 200 that you'd said something like that.
Yes, sir.
Did you have trouble getting people to talk?
And I mean really talk, because the problem with these kind of books sometimes can be it's hard to find somebody who's willing to go either on the record or even off the record and tell you stuff that doesn't paint the subject of the book in a pretty good light.
It was exhausting, to be honest with you it just like sustained effort trying to get people
to talk i've been covering politics for a long time and i've tried to develop a reputation
of somebody who knows how to keep his mouth shut you know what i mean that to be that source work
where i don't uh i don't talk about who talks to me under really any circumstances so i that's
a thing that i can say to people is you know that you that i'm going to be quiet about this what you
tell me and so it required a lot of patient persistent work but people still don't have
to talk to you and they and they're nervous and so that was it was exhausting. But I was really pleased in the end with how many people were willing to talk to me.
And I found it admirable in a sense, because what it is, is they like to read political books.
They think there should be a record.
And so it's not all people who have a bone to pick or a score to settle and
i would not indulge in any score settling or bone picking with people you know what i mean i'm not
that's not what i'm here for to help somebody get back at somebody who uh
myth them um but i i found that uh touching at times the way people would say, well, you know, yes, I will talk to you, but let's be careful about how we're going to do this.
And including a whole lot of impressive people whose names do not appear in the book, you know, that those were nice moments when you get them.
And but it's a lot. It's very demanding and sort of, you have to be persistent and polite
and, you know.
I think my next book, I'm
tempted to write something about
the beginnings of the RCMP
so that I don't have to interview anyone.
Yeah,
well, that's a hell of a book.
Yeah.
Listen, good luck with this. I know you've
done your kind of two-week flogging the book
in different parts of the country and on various shows like this,
which can be exhausting in itself.
You know, I've written a few books,
nothing with the kind of weight of what you've been dealing with.
But sometimes the work after you finish writing can be just as hard,
if not harder, than the actual sitting down and writing the book.
And it's a different skill set, right?
It uses different parts of your brain.
You're used to being a little hermit sitting there typing,
and then suddenly you've got to be the guy standing there with a box of soap.
Hi!
Yeah, exactly.
Well, listen, good luck with it.
I'm sure the timing is interesting.
Well, thank you very much.
It's an honor for me to be on your podcast, Mr. Ransbridge.
Thank you.
Oh, Jesus, Stephen, really?
I bet you say that to all the interviewers.
Anyway, good luck.
Take care, and thanks for doing this.
Thank you.
Well, there you go.
Stephen Mayer, the latest of the authors we've been talking to
about the political scene in Canada.
His new book, The Prince.
It's available out there right now.
You can find it in bookstores or online.
So don't be shy about grabbing a copy of that.
Sounds more than interesting, right?
Okay, we're going to take our one break
and come back with a few notes
before we leave you for this day.
So we'll be right back after this.
And welcome back.
You're listening to The Bridge right here on Sirius XM,
Channel 167, Canada Talks, or on your favorite podcast platform.
We're happy to have you with us.
Yeah, you know, I was mentioning that of late,
we've done a number of political books
as they relate to the country in this moment.
It is a fascinating moment to be in.
We're a year and a half at the most away from an election.
You have one party, the opposition party,
with a huge lead in the public opinion polls, for whatever that means.
And then you have the governing party that's been in power since November of 2015.
So, almost nine years.
By the time there's an election, it could be almost ten years.
Which is a long time for any government to be in power.
It's a time when people are looking for options.
And so helping you make those choices around options
are some of the books that are out there right now in the last few weeks.
We've done, obviously, what you just heard with Stephen Mayer
on The Prince, on Justin Trudeau.
Last week was A Political Life about Pierre Pelliev with Andrew Lawton.
And a couple of weeks ago, we had Paul Wells on with,
it's funny, you know, some people calling it a book.
He calls it a book at times, at other times he calls it an essay.
It's about 100 pages long.
But it's Paul Wells' view on Justin Trudeau.
And the book is titled, what is it titled?
Something about a rope.
Anyway, Justin Trudeau's book by Paul Wells.
So you've got three of them right there, right?
So a bit of summer reading there for you.
Because if we're going to make this choice next year,
we should make it with some knowledge
of the people we're dealing with.
And those are a couple of the possibilities.
Conservatives, the Liberals, obviously.
There are other choices as well.
The NDP and Jagmeet Singh.
Bloc Québécois, if you're living in Quebec,
the Green Party,
which will be running in various ridings across the country.
So there you go.
Lots of study to do, lots of choices to make.
Next week is our final week.
Thursday is your turn.
And that question of the week,
you can send your answers through the Mansbridge podcast at gmail.com.
The Mansbridge podcast at gmail.com.
The question of the week is,
name your favorite, favorite Canadian song.
And to be Canadian should be either sung by a Canadian
or written by a Canadian.
And give me a line as to why you chose that one.
And that was our Encore Wednesday episode of The Bridge.
Our discussion was Stephen Mayer,
the author of the new book on Justin Trudeau called The Prince.
We'll see you tomorrow.