Go directly to the menu Site plan
  • Normal
  • Medium
  • Large

Les Archives de Radio-Canada

Home · Politics · Prime Ministers · Pierre Elliott Trudeau mobbed by crowd

Pierre Elliott Trudeau mobbed by crowd

Broadcast Date: Feb. 9, 1968

At an Ontario Liberal Party press conference in early 1968, a crowd of 500 clusters around Liberal Justice Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau. They've trapped him for two hours now, asking him questions about his future. Will he run for the party's federal leadership? What can his government do for the country? Among this bunch of seasoned Liberal politicians, Trudeau, a constitutional lawyer, is really a political neophyte.
MORE ON PIERRE TRUDEAU

He was also reluctant about coming to the press conference, saying party members have "induced" his appearance here today. Trudeau tells reporters that before deciding if he'll run for prime minister to replace Lester B. Pearson, he needs to make sure that he'll be able to create change. After a long line of staid Canadian prime ministers, change may be just what the country's looking for.

Pierre Elliott Trudeau mobbed by crowd

• Seven days after the Ontario Liberal Party press conference, Trudeau announced he would run for leadership.

• In 1968 Trudeau told reporters his leadership bid started as a practical joke. Journalists and politicians later alleged he planned to run all along but as a gimmick attempted to appear politically unaffected.

• On April 6 he won the leadership bid. He was sworn in as Canada's 15th prime minister on April 20, 1968.

Pierre Elliott Trudeau mobbed by crowd

Medium: Television

Program: The National

Broadcast Date: Feb. 9, 1968

Guest(s): Pierre Elliott Trudeau


Reporter: Ron Collister

Duration: 2:42

Last updated:
Aug. 19, 2009


End of list




Discover also
Wayne Gretzky
Radio
20:19
March 25, 1974
A 13-year-old Wayne Gretzky in conversation with CBC's Peter Gzowski.
Alexander Graham Bell
Radio
26:57
The telephone is an instant success after inventor Alexander Graham Bell demonstrates it at the 1876 world's fair in Philadelphia.