The Briefing with Albert Mohler - Tuesday, January 7, 2025

Episode Date: January 7, 2025

This is The Briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview.Part I (00:13 - 15:56)Canada’s Liberal Prime Minister Is Out: Justin Trudeau Announces Resignation as He and His ...Party Faced Electoral DisasterPart II (15:56 - 23:33)Florida, New York, and the ‘Flailing Left’: What the Juxtaposition of the Two States Reveals about the Crisis of Progressive GovernmentThe crisis of democracy is really a crisis for the left by The Washington Post (Fareed Zakaria)Part III (23:33 - 26:41)A Political Controversy from a Cartoonist? The Washington Post Refuses to Run Cartoon of Bezos Bowing to Trump – But Bezos Owns The PostSign up to receive The Briefing in your inbox every weekday morning.Follow Dr. Mohler:X | Instagram | Facebook | YouTubeFor more information on The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbts.edu.For more information on Boyce College, just go to BoyceCollege.com.To write Dr. Mohler or submit a question for The Mailbox, go here.

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Starting point is 00:00:04 It's Tuesday, January 7, 2025. I'm Albert Mowler, and this is the briefing, a daily analysis of news and events from a Christian worldview. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada announced yesterday that he will be stepping down as the leader of his party, the liberal party in Canada, and thus he would also be stepping down as the country's head of government, which is to say, prime minister. He has served in that role since 2015, and as you look at the history of Canada, you recognize. this is a very significant transition. Justin Trudeau's resignation statement means that Canada's parliament is now put into a state of suspension. It is formerly known as the parliament being proroged until that date of March the 24th. And on March the 24th, some decision will have to be made. It is likely at that time that a new leader of the Liberal Party will try to put together a coalition and form a government. But at this point, March the 24th seems quite a way off. And the most immediate,
Starting point is 00:01:04 reflections on the part of Canadians and others is what the fall of the Trudeau government means. And this is important for Americans. It's important that Americans understand what is going on across our northern border, and also to understand that even as Canada's government system is quite different than our own, we are looking at an allied nation, and we're also looking at the fact that there are very key cultural and moral indicators that become very clear when you look across the north. As I have often remarked on the briefing, if you want to be a lot, if you want to see what Europe looks like in moral and political terms, you just go across America's northern border. You're still in North America. You're in Canada, but in so many ways,
Starting point is 00:01:44 Canadian culture mirrors, as well as its politics, in many ways mirroring developments in Europe and in the European tradition. Even in the last few weeks, articles have been written somewhat sarcastic, at least it has to be admitted in tone. Articles have been written suggesting that Canada should seek membership in the European Union. The footnote to that is that such a move sarcastically would be intended to protect Canada from the kinds of aggressive moves, particularly when it comes to terrorists and other trade policies that may well be undertaken by a newly inaugurated President Donald J. Trump inaugurated, of course, for his second term. Canada is bracing itself. That's a part of the story. That's also a part of the timing here. The fall of the Trudeau government
Starting point is 00:02:30 didn't come out of the blue, and frankly, his position has become weaker and weaker over the last several years, and in particular, over the last several weeks. One particular leader in his party, Christia Freeland, who had served as deputy prime minister and also as finance minister, her very loud resignation from office was a clear signal of a lack of confidence in the prime minister himself. At that point, it was as if you had a vice president of the United States resigned from the administration declaring that the president, the president of the president of the United States, declaring that the president is incompetent. Let's just say that constitutionally,
Starting point is 00:03:04 we'd be entering into uncharted territory in the United States. In Canada, this is just the way government works. And that's one of the distinctions between America's constitutional system with our separation of powers and a very strong chief executive unity of the head of government and the head of state in one person.
Starting point is 00:03:22 In Canada, historically and constitutionally, it's a very different system. It is a parliamentary system far closer in terms of an analogy to the British Parliament and to that tradition. And it's important to recognize when you ask the question, who is the head of state of Canada? My guess is that most Americans would strain to be able to answer the question. But the head of state in Canada is King Charles III of the United Kingdom. And the monarch is represented in the nation by the person appointed as Governor General.
Starting point is 00:03:51 It is to the Governor General that Justin Trudeau offered his resignation statement. Now, just in constitutional terms, because as Christians, we were, recognize there are massive worldview implications and the formation of a constitutional structure, rather than the division of government with the separation of powers between the executive, the legislative, and the judicial, as we have in the United States. When you look at Canada's system, it is far more like the British parliamentary system, understandable given Canada's history, as actually an extension of the British Empire, at one point an extension of Britain itself. But you also understand that the strength of the parliamentary system is,
Starting point is 00:04:29 is that you do have a unified government. And so the prime minister as the head of government, and by definition the head of a political coalition, if not simply the head of a dominant political party, in theory, in a parliamentary system, the prime minister should never lose a vote. That means that a prime minister really loses office when either the voters reduce his party or her party to a minority status and the coalition falls apart, or you have a situation inside the party where the party decides it needs very different leadership. In Canada right now, the likelihood is both of those things were going to happen. The question is which happens first.
Starting point is 00:05:04 In this case, Justin Trudeau largely under pressure from his own party. And the background to this is that his party is 20 points behind in polling for the national election, which can come no later than October of this year. And so the party for its own self-preservation is ditching its leader. It is ditching the prime minister. And behind that's another very big story. Lots of stories that are embedded in this. lots of worldview implications. Justin Trudeau is in himself something a parable of modern politics.
Starting point is 00:05:35 He is the son of former Canadian Prime Minister, the late Pierre Elliott Trudeau. And his father served as the Prime Minister of Canada, the head of the same party, the Liberal Party, between 1968 and 1979, he remained once his government fell as the leader of the Liberal Party, and the Liberal Party came back into a majority, and thus he came back as Prime Minister in the years 1980 to 1984. Okay, think about that for a moment. Think about those two periods in the premierships of the father, Pierre Elliott-Turdow, who was himself kind of presented as a Kennedy-esque figure. And John F. Kennedy was elected president of the United States in 1960, very flamboyant figure, considered a symbol of progressivism, very much a political, liberal,
Starting point is 00:06:21 center-left in some ways, even more left in other ways. The darling of the elite. and the celebrity culture in the United States. That was John F. Kennedy as president of the United States in Canada. It was Pierre Elliott Trudeau. And there are other issues in Canada, including the fact that the issue of Quebec is always, at least close under the surface. With Trudeau, it was even closer to the surface. He was seen as a unifying figure, at least it was hoped. He was also just seen as a celebrity prime minister, a progressive, a liberal who was going to step into the scene in the 1960s with the other big. wave of liberalism that was sweeping so many Western nations, including, as I said, the United
Starting point is 00:07:01 States, at least as was perceived in the new frontier that was presented by President John F. Kennedy. And, of course, he began his term in 1961. This is at the end of that decade when Pierre Elliott Trudeau became Prime Minister of Canada, very assertive, very much progressive, very liberal, very much a celebrity. He married a woman who became, of course, Margaret Trudeau, his wife, another celebrity. They would break up in a kind of celebrity fashion. Pierre Elliott Trudeau would end his premiership, that second phase in the years 1980 to 1984. Okay, what's going on then? It is not a liberal resurgence around the world, especially on both sides of the Atlantic, in the English-speaking world. It was a conservative ascendancy. It was a failure of liberalism.
Starting point is 00:07:49 So Margaret Thatcher is the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. And you have Ronald Reagan as president of the United States. Pierre Elliott-Turdow was out of step, and he was replaced with a succession of prime ministers, and at least one of them, a conservative prime minister, Brian Mulroney, became part of a quartet or a troika of major Western leaders that would have included Margaret Thatcher, Ronald Reagan, put Mulroney among them. And, by the way, the former prime minister at that point, Brian Mulrooney was one of the speakers at the state funeral for Ronald Reagan years later. There was a very close partnership there.
Starting point is 00:08:24 But we are now looking at the fact that there was another liberal resurgence that came, and writing that resurgence was the son of Pierre Elliott Trudeau, that is Justin Trudeau. He has resigned, as I said, from office just yesterday. He is going to be a caretaker prime minister until his replacement is named. Justin Trudeau is only 53. He was seen as a figure of youthfulness when he became the head of his party and then when he became prime minister in 2015, he was reelected, basically his government was reelected, in elections in 2019 and in 2021, but that 2021 election was a sign of trouble to come. And when you look at Justin Trudeau, he was a boy, by the way, at one point in a visit between the Trudeau's and the American
Starting point is 00:09:09 President and First Lady, that would have been Richard Nixon and Pat Nixon. Richard Nixon picked up Justin Trudeau's a baby and announced he'll be a future Prime Minister of Canada. It's not often remembered that Richard Nixon was a prophet in that sense. Justin Trudeau did become the Prime Minister of Canada. He was seen as a resurgence of the Trudeau dynasty, but he was also seen as a new youthful form of liberalism coming on the scene, progressivism, big government. Here's the thing you need to keep in mind. The Liberal Party in Britain is akin to the Labor Party in the United Kingdom.
Starting point is 00:09:40 It's thus somewhat aligned with the Democratic Party in the United States. That's the party of big government, big spending, and big liberalism. When it came to Justin Trudeau, you can understand that people on the left, they were absolutely excited that here you had the telegenic son of Pierre Trudeau. He is coming now as Justin Trudeau, the prime minister, and you have the Trudeau dynasty back. Liberalism is back. Celebrity is back. Justin Trudeau was often remarked on concerning his youthful appearance.
Starting point is 00:10:08 He was considered another celebrity figure. He was treated as a celebrity. So is his wife, by the way, his wife, Sophie. They were married in 2005, but they separated in 2023. They have three children. And even when you had the father and the mother, that is Pierre and Margaret Trudeau, separate, it was the father who maintained custody. Something like that has happened in the situation of Justin Trudeau.
Starting point is 00:10:33 He has had, at least in large part, the custody of their three children after the marital separation. But the big issue in liberalism here is the ideology. Justin Trudeau was a big spin liberal, and you also had Justin Trudeau as very pro-immigration. Now, when you look at the immigration situation in Canada, it is very controversial. It's not controversial in exactly the same way it is in the United States, and that is because Canada has a population of about 40 million people. It's a vast territory. It's the second largest country by landmass when it comes to the entire planet.
Starting point is 00:11:05 And thus you have a dense population to certain points, particularly along the border, with the United States and on the coast, that is to say, the southern coast. But beyond that, you really have a very sparsely populated country. And Canada has historically often needed immigration, but the point is, Justin Trudeau was welcoming immigration at the very point when that was becoming far more problematic. And predictably, one of the big problems in Canada right now, and one of the issues of political vulnerability for Trudeau and for his liberal government is a housing crisis. And here's one of the big lessons for governments, in Western nations. When you have a housing crisis, it's not a crisis you can fix fast. And when you have a
Starting point is 00:11:47 housing crisis, you often have the middle class that gets squeezed and thus gets angry and thus takes out its anger in terms of electoral politics. Justin Trudeau was going to lead his party to absolute electoral disaster, and thus he simply had to get out of the way. The resignation of his deputy prime minister was just the fuse that was lit, but the bomb was already set in that sense. He was going to have to go. Here's something we need to keep in mind. When you think about Justin Trudeau, you also need to understand that on moral issues, we're talking about someone who basically subverted the entire moral calculus. You're talking about someone who pressed for legalized assisted suicide or aid in dying, as it was called in Canada. And whereas in some European
Starting point is 00:12:30 nations, predictably, you've seen a slippery slope. You say it's simply for persons in the last few days before death. It's diagnosed under medical supervision. The next thing you know, those criteria keep getting expanded and expanded, once you buy into the ideology of euthanasia or assisted suicide, you're just negotiating with death. And that negotiation leads to a downward spiral. Death wins in that negotiation. And it certainly has in Canada. On LGBTQ issues, Canada's very liberal.
Starting point is 00:13:00 On religious issues, Canada is rather weak. And in particular, you do not have the kinds of guarantees of religious liberty that in this country have led to some very significant court. victories and even what we would call the reassertion of religious liberty and certainly the rights of individual citizens, but also the rights of Christian churches and Christian institutions to operate. Religious liberty is in that sense much more vulnerable there in Canada. On the abortion question, just all the questions across the moral calculus, you're looking at a rather comprehensive liberalism, and as I said, a subversion of the Christian moral order, of the moral order that Christianity acknowledges, even back to creation order.
Starting point is 00:13:38 We're talking about something fundamental. When you look at the effects of secularization on a modern society, you can look, of course, to Europe, but honestly, you can look across the northern border from the United States to Canada. That's not to say that secularization is not underway here. It is to say that it has advanced in a very significant way in Canada much further than it has here in the United States. And it's not just for historical and understandable reasons in the progression of our histories as nations. it's also because of some basic constitutional distinctions that are a part of that history. So World View comes back. How you look at the organization of government, how you look at the
Starting point is 00:14:16 definition of what it means to be a citizen, how you look at the definition of the limits and the responsibilities of government. As you look at issues as fundamental as life and the protection of life, you understand that the unraveling of a civilization here in a secular age is becoming more apparent in these countries. Now, where will Canada go from here? That's an answer. only the Canadians can give, and that will take some time. As I said, the polls were indicating that under Justin Trudeau, the Liberal Party, was falling out of favor to the extent there were about 20 points behind in national polling. That's very massive. But Justin Trudeau is stepping down as prime minister and his party leader in the hopes that someone who might be able to narrow that gap can be appointed.
Starting point is 00:14:58 You're going to be seeing a political clash in Canada, but we as Christians understand it is a worldview clash. It's going to be one very close to us, very important to us. It's going to be one we need to watch. But when you look at the fall of Justin Trudeau as prime minister, you think back to his father, Pierre Elliott Trudeau. You understand there's a big story here, and it is linked to politics and to culture, to moral questions in the United States as well. Justin Trudeau's resignation, the fall of the Trudeau government in Canada is just the latest. When you see liberal regimes in Western Democratic nations running out of steam, you see governments falling, you see political crises in Germany and in France.
Starting point is 00:15:37 We need to understand that this could lead to a new conservative trajectory, or it could lead, and this is true here in the United States as well, to something very different, not a conservative trajectory. We're going to have to wait and see, and frankly not just wait and see, but work for what we hope for. But next, coming back here to the United States, so the 2024 election was a wake-up call, particularly for the Democratic Party and for the Democratic Party
Starting point is 00:16:03 and for the secular left, the progressive left in the United States. And one of the things we see is that a lot of questions are being asked. But the interesting thing is to note that most of these questions appear to be asked outside that party structure, outside the party authority. It's not so much of these questions are being asked inside the Democratic Party by Democratic figures as they are being noted by others. And it's not just a partisan issue. In many ways, it is a failure of the left of liberal governments and liberal parties,
Starting point is 00:16:31 liberal candidates to deliver on their promises. Farid Zakaria, columnist for the Washington Post, well-known figure in foreign policy, he has offered an article just in recent days entitled, Why is the Left Flailing Look at New York versus Florida? Now, Zakaria, who is a former managing editor of Foreign Affairs, he is a graduate of Yale, he received his Ph.D. from Harvard. He was born in 1964 in India. He has become a rather influential figure in the United States.
Starting point is 00:17:01 he's a part of the foreign policy establishment, at least in terms of commentary. And he is writing this article about the domestic scene in the United States. The context is the larger crisis of liberalism in the West. But he writes here, why is the left flailing? Now, flailing is an interesting word, because that means like being in the water drowning with your arms just flailing. You're not making any progress. You're just offering a lot of energy and desperation. But then the comparison he offers is the comparison between the the state of New York and then the state of Florida. And as I'm speaking to you from Florida, I can tell you this is a very relevant issue. So Farid Zakaria begins by saying that of the 27
Starting point is 00:17:41 countries of the European Union, quote, only a handful have left to center parties leading government coalitions. The primary left to center party in the European Parliament now has just 136 seats in a 720 seat chamber. He's going on to say there is a crisis in terms of these liberal governments. And he goes on in the United States to point to the victory of Donald Trump in the recent national election, he says this, quote, the crisis of democratic government then is actually a crisis of progressive government. People seem to feel that they have been taxed, regulated, bossed around, and intimidated by left-of-center politicians for decades, but the results are bad and have been getting worse, end quote. Now, he's on to something here. He goes on to say
Starting point is 00:18:21 that you can see the problem when you compare the two states of Florida and New York. And he points out that both of them are just about the same size. The two. two states have about 20 or 23 million citizens. So they're roughly analogous in size and in population. But when you look at government, you look at government spending, you look at taxation, you look at other economic issues, the two aren't even comparable. After noting the close size of population between the two states, Zaccaria then writes, quote, but New York state's budget is more than double that of Florida, 329 billion versus roughly 116 billion. New York City, he writes, which is a little more than three times the size of Miami-Dade County is a budget of more than
Starting point is 00:19:03 $100 billion a year, which is nearly 10 times that of Miami-Dade. New York City's spending, he writes, grew from 2012 to 2019 by 40 percent, four times the rate of inflation. He then asked the question, does any New Yorker feel that they got 40 percent better services during that time? End quote. So the population is about the same, but the spending in one state is a multiple of the spending in the other. The taxes in one state, a multiple of the taxes in the other, and government spending growing by 40% in New York, which is four times the rate of inflation. Zakaria then asked, quote, what do New Yorkers get for these vast sums generated by the highest
Starting point is 00:19:41 tax rates in the country? He says, if you're well off in New York City, you pay nearly as much in income taxes as in London, Paris, or Berlin without the free higher education or health care. He continues writing, quote, New York's poverty rate is higher than Florida's. New York has a slightly lower rate of homeownership and a much higher rate of homelessness. Despite spending more than twice as much on education per student, New York has educational outcomes, graduation rates, eighth grade test scores that are roughly the same as Florida's, end quote. So you have two states about the same population, but New York taxes at a far higher rate.
Starting point is 00:20:18 It spends at a multiple rate. And as you're looking at it, it doesn't deliver the poverty rates higher than Florida. the homelessness problem is worse in New York than in Florida, and the educational problems come even as New York spends twice as much as Florida. He then writes this, quote, It's easy to comfort oneself by thinking that these sky-high tax rates and growing government revenues are providing some crucial ingredients of progressive government. But they are often, he writes, simply the toll of waste and mismanagement. He goes on and gives examples, but he comes down to the argument that, you know, people looking at New York and Florida will see
Starting point is 00:20:54 states with roughly the same-sized population. But they will look at the fact that, wow, an awful lot of money gets taxed in New York and then get spent by New York's government, and yet it's hard to see how it improves anything. If anything, it does the opposite. The poverty rate higher. The homelessness rate is higher. The educational outcomes, well, about the same. Fere Zakarie goes on to say there's another problem here, and that is that you have the political power of labor unions and others, and this means sometimes when it comes to government workers, it's teachers' unions and all the rest that starts to pile things up. But it's also the fact that these states have invested in massive pension plans for retired government employees. And eventually those pension plans begin to
Starting point is 00:21:33 strangle the entire government because it's very easy for politicians to enter into an agreement with workers, their government workers, when it comes to these very generous pension plans, some of them can pay out as much in retirement as they did in active work. And of course, it's just a matter of exploding the bills for citizens and especially for future generations. And that comes with a cost. And some of those costs are showing up in a state like New York right now. But I think for Eid Zakaria makes a really interesting argument in this article because he says, you know, if all of this tax money that was confiscated from taxpayers and if all this government spending amounted to something that the government could say, look, here's the good investment of your
Starting point is 00:22:14 money. Maybe the people wouldn't be so upset about it. The failure of liberal government, and that means leftist progressivist government in this context. The failure of liberal government here is the failure to deliver on the promises while continuing to draw huge monies and taxes, confiscate those taxes, and then spend it in government spending that, quite honestly, any sane person would have to say is out of control. And honestly, it's so out of control. It's hard to know how it could be brought back into control. Now, as a Christian and as a conservative, I can say that I could wish, and I certainly hope and pray for the fact that some genuinely conservative alternative could come along and be in favor by the very voters who are, well, creating the political crisis for someone like Justin Trudeau and Canada.
Starting point is 00:22:59 But the fact is that when you have a failure of liberalism, it doesn't always lead to conservatism. It can lead to something else. And here's where conservatives need to show up with conservative arguments, with conservative evidence, and conservative policies, and continue to show conservative results. but it does tell us something that a figure like Fareed Zakaria, and he's not a far-left figure, but it is interesting that he would point out the distinction between New York and Florida, and it's pretty hard for anyone to argue that what he says isn't true, and frankly, being true, it's also very important.
Starting point is 00:23:33 Well, okay, you may have heard a controversy related to the Washington Post, Ann Telness, who is a Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist to the Washington Post. she resigned in protest because her editor there at the Washington Post refused to run a cartoon she had done, showing major Silicon Valley high-tech executives bowing the knee to Donald Trump. One of them happens to be a very clear image of Jeff Bezos, who happens to be, of course, the founder of Amazon, major figure in the technological world, major figure where the richest men in the world, who, by the way, also owns the Washington Post. Now, what's really interesting is to see how the very liberal media has coalesced around this by saying,
Starting point is 00:24:16 Ann Telness did the right thing, she has resigned because of conscience. This is an impingement of the freedom of the press. But remember, the freedom of the press constitutionally is the freedom of the one who owns the press. And so it's not the freedom of a reporter to say whatever he or she wants or a columnist to write or argue whatever he or she wants. The paper is owned by someone, and that someone may not be an individual, it may be a corporation, and maybe a trust, but eventually it is those who own the entity who'll decide who's going to report the news, what kind of news is going to be reported. And so when you look at this, you recognize that what has happened in the profession of journalism in so many ways has been that a progressivist notion has taken hold in which the profession believes that it, by definition, can alone define
Starting point is 00:25:02 what is right and wrong in the context of journalism. But you know what? They don't own the newspaper. they don't own the cable channel, they don't own the television station, they don't own the internet site, and the person who does own it or the corporation or trust or entity that does own it, well, eventually gets to make the call. And in this case, the Washington Post editor team tried to ask Antelnis to come back, but at least according to some, she's not going back. Jeff Bezos hasn't commented on this, and frankly, he doesn't have to. But it is really interesting to see how in so many professions, a progressivist, very leftist ideological worldview, has so set in that, just to state the matter plainly, they believe their own propaganda.
Starting point is 00:25:47 And in this case, this cartoonist is being celebrated for her courage and all her peers are piling on with celebration, but you know what? At the end of all the celebration, she's not going to have a job. And Jeff Bezos is still going to own the Washington Post, and history is going to roll on. No doubt at times is a righteous thing to resign in protest, but in any event, if you resign, guess what? You're out of a job. Thanks for listening to the briefing. For more information, go to my website at Albertmuller.com. You can follow me on Twitter by going to Twitter.com forward slash Albert Mueller. For information on the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, go to sbtsd.u. For informational voice college, just go to voicecollege.com.
Starting point is 00:26:26 I'm speaking to you from St. Petersburg, Florida, and I'll meet you again tomorrow for the briefing.

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