Calgary

Poilievre, Trudeau, Smith make rounds in annual political Calgary Stampede circuit

Federal and provincial politicians took the opportunity to speak to supporters at different Stampede breakfasts this year.

Politicians saddle up to impress at Calgary Stampede pancake breakfast events

A man wearing a cowboy hat flipping pancakes.
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, centre, cooks pancakes as he attends a Stampede pancake breakfast in Calgary, Saturday, July 8, 2023. (Jeff McIntosh/The Canadian Press)

Politics and pancake breakfasts can make for strange bedfellows. 

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith shared the podium Saturday as they both attended a Stampede pancake breakfast put on by the Ismaili Muslim community. 

The two leaders have had a somewhat frosty relationship but shook hands prior to a private meeting Friday where they discussed Alberta's concerns about emission reductions, the goal of establishing a net-zero electricity grid by 2035 and the ongoing strike among British Columbia port workers.

A crowd of people stand around a griddle with pancakes in a parking lot. One of them is a woman in a cowboy hat.
Danielle Smith flips pancakes at Marlborough Mall in Calgary Saturday. (Helen Pike/CBC)

"It's great to be here with Premier Smith. Thank you Danielle for your leadership," Trudeau said in his opening remarks at the breakfast.

The two didn't appear to have any time to chat.

"I'd like to thank the prime minister for his comments," Smith said in response.

WATCH | Trudeau flips pancakes at Stampede pancake breakfast

Trudeau flips pancakes at Calgary Stampede breakfast

1 year ago
Duration 0:27
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took part in a Stampede tradition on Saturday, a day after a brief meeting with Alberta Premier Danielle Smith where the two discussed carbon emissions and the strike by B.C. port workers.

'A debt of gratitude' to the Ismaili community

Instead of politics, the two leaders focused on the impact the Ismaili community has had on Canada since members began settling here en masse more than 50 years ago.

Trudeau said Ismailis still approach him to express their gratitude for the work his father, Pierre Elliott Trudeau, did in bringing members of the community to Canada in large numbers.

"It is much more true that my father and I and Canada owe you a debt of gratitude. Not just for what you've contributed to this country but for being a shining example of what welcoming people who are fleeing violence, persecution, fear can do," he said.

A man in a cowboy hat speaks into a microphone. There are people standing around him.
Federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre speaks to a crowd in Calgary Saturday. (Helen Pike/CBC)

"When we welcome in refugees, we are not only giving them opportunities. We are enriching our country so deeply from everything this community has done in Canada."

Smith also heaped praise on the Ismaili community for its generosity.

"This Stampede breakfast is more proof of your generosity which knows no bounds," she said.

"It's not limited by faith or culture or colour and has marked Alberta deeply. Every day you change lives by volunteering, improving education and practicing social responsibility."

Poilievre's hometown politics

Federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre also attended the event and took photos with the crowd. 

Later on Saturday morning, Poilievre was at Marlborough Mall for Calgary Forest Lawn MP Jasraj Singh Hallan's pancake breakfast. 

He talked to the crowd about policies including cutting the carbon tax, lowering income taxes and strengthening Alberta's oil and gas industry.

A man shaking hands with a young person.
Federal Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre takes photos with the crowd at MP Jasraj Singh Hallan's pancake breakfast. (Helen Pike/CBC)

Poilievre also criticized Trudeau's leadership through the last eight years.

"Life costs more, work doesn't pay, housing costs have doubled, crime, chaos, drugs and disorder are common in our streets," Poilievre told the crowd.

"Some of my best memories were when I had one of my first jobs, picking up garbage at the Stampede … and now we actually have to clean house on Parliament Hill and in Ottawa as well."

Poilievre was born in Calgary to a 16-year-old single mother. He was adopted by Francophone school teachers and raised in the city, where he found his political affiliations at the University of Calgary.

A spokesperson for the federal NDP said party leader Jagmeet Singh has no plans on coming to the Stampede this year but did not say why.

Alberta NDP leader Rachel Notley will be part of the party's pancake breakfast on Tuesday, a spokesperson confirmed.

Rallying support

Trudeau spent a short time flipping pancakes at the Ismaili Muslim community's event before heading to his own second breakfast of the morning at an event hosted by Liberal MP George Chahal.

A huge crowd was on hand to hear the prime minister's second speech which took a more political turn.

"The reality is George needs reinforcements, and I really much hope over the coming years we're going to elect more members of Parliament from the Liberal party for Alberta," Trudeau said.

He also urged those listening to continue working toward making Canada better during these trying times.

"The world is facing tremendous challenges right now. Whether it be war returning to Europe, the destabilization of the world with energy prices and food prices, whether it be climate change having an increasing impact including on the wildfires," Trudeau said.

"There's a lot of reasons to feel anxious and worried about the future, but there are also so many reasons to be optimistic and positive and ambitious about the country we get to build every single day."

Trudeau was swarmed after his speech by people seeking photos and autographs or wanting to shake his hand.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Bill Graveland is a Calgary-based reporter for The Canadian Press.

With files from Helen Pike and Omar Sherif